Staged Bi-compartmental Knee Arthroplasty for Contralateral Compartment Failure After Medial Unicompartmental Knee Arthroplasty in Dialysis Patients: Two Case Reports
Atsuo Inoue, Yuji Arai, Yasushi Yoshihara, Shuji Nakagawa, Kenji Takahashi

TL;DR
This paper reports two cases where dialysis patients needed additional knee surgery after initial treatment failed due to bone fragility.
Contribution
The novel contribution is the use of staged bi-compartmental knee arthroplasty in dialysis patients with contralateral compartment failure.
Findings
Staged bi-compartmental UKA was effective in treating contralateral compartment failure in dialysis patients.
Long-term dialysis may cause bone fragility in the contralateral knee compartment.
No postoperative overcorrection or abnormal bone density was found in the cases studied.
Abstract
Unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) is a minimally invasive surgical technique with good clinical outcomes; however, its outcomes in patients undergoing hemodialysis are unknown. Herein, we report two cases of patients undergoing hemodialysis who underwent staged bi-compartmental UKA (Bi-UKA) for early contralateral compartment failure after medial UKA. We describe the case of early contralateral compartment failure after medial UKA in two women patients aged 71 and 72 years with a dialysis history of seven and 22 years, respectively. Three months after right medial UKA, she had persistent joint edema and arthralgia after minor trauma, with recurrent gait disturbance in the first case. An MRI showed a bone marrow lesion in the contralateral compartment, and a lateral UKA was added. In the second case, the knee pain worsened without any trigger three years after leaving the medial…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTotal Knee Arthroplasty Outcomes · Orthopaedic implants and arthroplasty · Muscle and Compartmental Disorders
