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Partial Knee Replacement

When I speak with Bangladeshi patients about knee replacement, one of the most common questions is whether the entire knee must be replaced or only the damaged part. In selected patients, a partial knee replacement can be a very good option. This operation is also called unicompartmental knee replacement, because it replaces only one worn part of the knee instead of the whole joint.[1]

In my practice, I usually explain that partial knee replacement is not a smaller version of total knee replacement for everyone. It is a specific operation for specific knee problems. When the pain, cartilage wear, and deformity are mainly limited to one side of the knee, and the other parts of the joint are still functioning reasonably well, replacing only that damaged compartment may help reduce pain and improve walking while preserving more of the natural knee.[1][2]

For patients in Dhaka and across Bangladesh, this topic matters because many people delay treatment for years. They often continue with pain medicines, injections, physiotherapy, prayer-based rest periods, or activity reduction until daily life becomes very difficult. By the time they seek evaluation, some still qualify for partial knee replacement, but many have already progressed to a stage where total knee replacement is more appropriate. That is why proper assessment at the right time is important.

What Partial Knee Replacement Means

The knee has three major compartments:

  • the inner side, called the medial compartment
  • the outer side, called the lateral compartment
  • the front part between the kneecap and the thigh bone, called the patellofemoral compartment

Partial knee replacement is considered when arthritis is mainly affecting one of these compartments, most commonly the medial compartment.[1][3] Instead of removing the whole joint surface, the surgeon replaces only the damaged section and preserves healthy bone, cartilage, and ligaments where possible.

This is one reason some patients feel that a partial knee replacement can feel more natural than a total knee replacement. The surgery generally preserves more of the knee’s normal structures, and recovery may be faster in properly selected cases.[2][4] However, the key phrase is properly selected. A good result depends heavily on whether the patient is the right candidate.

Who May Be a Good Candidate

When I evaluate patients for this surgery, I do not look at the X-ray alone. I look at symptoms, walking pattern, deformity, ligament stability, range of motion, weight-bearing pain, and how much of the knee is actually diseased.

Common situations where partial knee replacement may be considered

  • osteoarthritis limited mainly to one compartment
  • pain localized more to one side of the knee
  • the ligaments, especially the cruciate ligaments, are functioning adequately
  • knee movement is still reasonably preserved
  • deformity is not too severe or fixed
  • non-surgical treatment has already failed

The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons notes that partial knee replacement is usually considered when arthritis is confined to one compartment, pain continues despite conservative treatment, and the knee remains sufficiently stable and mobile for this focused procedure.[1] MedlinePlus also describes it as an option when damage affects only part of the knee rather than the entire joint.[2]

When it may not be the right choice

In Bangladesh, many patients come late with advanced arthritis in multiple compartments, marked deformity, severe stiffness, or long-standing inflammatory disease. In such situations, a total knee replacement is often more appropriate than a partial replacement. Partial knee replacement may also not be the best option if the knee is unstable, if the arthritis is widespread, or if there is major damage behind the kneecap depending on the overall clinical picture.[1][3]

Why Patients Sometimes Prefer It

Patients are often interested in partial knee replacement because they hear that recovery can be quicker and the operation is less extensive. There is some truth in that, but it must be explained carefully.

Potential advantages

  • smaller area of bone and cartilage replacement
  • preservation of more normal knee structures
  • less blood loss in many cases
  • shorter hospital stay in selected patients
  • faster early functional recovery in many patients
  • knee movement that may feel more natural to some people

Evidence comparing partial and total knee replacement suggests that partial knee replacement can offer favorable early recovery and patient-relevant functional outcomes in appropriately selected patients.[4][5] That said, this does not mean it is automatically better. It means it may be better for the right patient with the right disease pattern and the right surgical planning.

One important point I want Bangladeshi patients to understand is that a partial knee replacement is not simply a “lighter” surgery to avoid a total replacement. It is a targeted procedure with a narrower indication. Choosing it for the wrong knee may lead to dissatisfaction or earlier revision.

How I Evaluate a Patient Before Surgery

Before recommending surgery, I usually review several practical questions:

1. Where exactly is the pain?

Pain only on the inner or outer side of the knee may support a partial replacement pattern, but generalized pain throughout the knee raises concern for more widespread disease.

2. What do standing X-rays show?

Weight-bearing X-rays are especially important. They help show whether arthritis is truly isolated or whether there is narrowing in more than one compartment.

3. Are the ligaments working well?

The stability of the knee matters. If the knee is unstable, the result of a partial replacement may be less predictable.

4. How stiff is the knee?

Very stiff knees or knees with major fixed deformity often push the decision more toward total knee replacement.

5. What are the patient’s goals?

Some patients want pain relief for daily namaz, stairs, market walking, office work, or simple home mobility. Others want to remain more active. The surgical choice must match those real-life expectations.

What Happens During the Operation

Knee Replacement Care by Dr. Md. Iftekharul Alam

In simple terms, the damaged part of the knee is removed and replaced with metal and plastic components designed for that compartment. The healthy parts of the knee are preserved as much as possible. The exact surgical technique depends on the compartment involved, bone quality, alignment, and implant plan.[1][2]

From a patient perspective in Dhaka, the important issues are not only the operation itself but also the full pathway:

  • preoperative medical assessment
  • diabetes and blood pressure optimization
  • infection-risk reduction
  • early mobilization
  • physiotherapy planning
  • realistic home support after discharge

These practical steps have a direct effect on recovery.

Recovery After Partial Knee Replacement

Recovery is often smoother than many patients fear, but it still requires effort. Partial knee replacement is a real joint replacement surgery, not a minor procedure. Some patients recover faster than they would after a total knee replacement, but they still need structured rehabilitation.[1][2]

In the first few weeks

Patients usually focus on:

  • controlling pain and swelling
  • regaining knee movement
  • walking safely
  • reducing limping
  • rebuilding thigh muscle strength

In the next phase

The goal becomes better function in daily life, including:

  • walking longer distances
  • using stairs more comfortably
  • sitting and standing with less difficulty
  • improving balance and confidence

For Bangladeshi families, recovery planning should include practical home realities. If the bathroom is a squat toilet, if the patient must climb stairs to reach the bedroom, or if there is limited support at home, those details need to be discussed before surgery. Good outcomes depend on both the operation and the recovery environment.

Partial Knee Replacement vs Total Knee Replacement

Patients often ask me which is better. The correct answer is that the better operation is the one that matches the disease pattern.

Partial knee replacement may be preferred when:

  • arthritis is limited to one compartment
  • the knee remains stable
  • deformity is limited
  • the goal is targeted replacement with preservation of more normal structures

Total knee replacement may be preferred when:

  • arthritis affects more than one compartment
  • deformity is more severe
  • knee instability is significant
  • pain is diffuse throughout the joint
  • the front of the knee is also badly involved

The TOPKAT randomized trial, which compared total and partial knee replacement in medial compartment osteoarthritis, found both to be clinically effective options, with differences that support individualized decision-making rather than a one-size-fits-all approach.[5] This is consistent with what I explain to patients in clinic: the decision should be based on the knee in front of us, not on advertising language or fear.

Risks and Limitations Patients Should Understand

Every surgery has limitations, and partial knee replacement is no exception.

Possible concerns include:

  • infection
  • blood clots
  • stiffness
  • persistent pain
  • implant loosening over time
  • progression of arthritis in the remaining compartments
  • need for revision to total knee replacement in some cases

Systematic reviews show that partial knee replacement can have advantages in some short-term outcomes but may also carry higher revision risk in some settings compared with total knee replacement, which is why patient selection and surgical judgment matter so much.[4][6]

I usually tell my patients not to choose partial knee replacement only because it sounds smaller or easier. The better question is: does your knee truly fit this operation?

When to See an Orthopedic Surgeon in Dhaka

You should not wait until the knee becomes severely bent or almost nonfunctional. Earlier evaluation can create more treatment options.

I recommend assessment if you have:

  • knee pain for months despite medicines and physiotherapy
  • one-sided knee pain that is worsening
  • difficulty with stairs, walking, or standing from a chair
  • night pain or pain that limits sleep
  • progressive bow-leg or knock-knee deformity
  • repeated swelling with osteoarthritis symptoms

Urgent evaluation is important if you suddenly cannot bear weight, develop fever with a painful swollen knee, or have major trauma around the knee. Those situations may indicate a different and more urgent problem.

My Practical Advice for Bangladeshi Patients

In my practice, I often see patients become confused because friends, YouTube videos, and social media discussions mix together total knee replacement, partial replacement, arthroscopy, injections, and osteotomy as if they are interchangeable. They are not.

If you are considering surgery, focus on these questions:

Ask whether:

  • the arthritis is limited to one part of the knee
  • your ligaments are intact enough for this procedure
  • standing X-rays support a partial replacement
  • a knee-preservation option is still possible
  • total knee replacement would actually give a more reliable long-term result

The right decision is not about choosing the smallest operation. It is about choosing the operation that matches the actual joint damage, your age, function, expectations, and recovery realities in Bangladesh.

References

  1. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. Unicompartmental (Partial) Knee Replacement. OrthoInfo. https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/treatment/unicompartmental-knee-replacement
  2. MedlinePlus. Partial knee replacement. https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/007256.htm
  3. MedlinePlus. Knee replacement. https://medlineplus.gov/kneereplacement.html
  4. Evans JT, Walker RW, Evans JP, Blom AW, Sayers A, Whitehouse MR. Patient relevant outcomes of unicompartmental versus total knee replacement: systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ. 2019. PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30792179/
  5. Beard DJ, Davies LJ, Cook JA, et al. The clinical and cost-effectiveness of total versus partial knee replacement in patients with medial compartment osteoarthritis (TOPKAT): 5-year outcomes of a randomised controlled trial. Lancet. PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31326135/
  6. van der List JP, Chawla H, Zuiderbaan HA, Pearle AD. Revision indications for medial unicompartmental knee arthroplasty: a systematic review. PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33630155/

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FAQs BY PATIENTS

No. Partial knee replacement replaces only the damaged compartment of the knee, while total knee replacement resurfaces the entire knee joint. The right choice depends on how much of the knee is affected.

You need a proper orthopedic evaluation with history, examination, and standing X-rays. In general, this surgery is considered when arthritis is limited to one compartment and the knee remains reasonably stable and mobile.

For many properly selected patients, early recovery can be faster than after total knee replacement. However, it is still a major orthopedic procedure and requires rehabilitation, pain control, and structured follow-up.

Yes. If arthritis progresses in other parts of the knee or if the implant fails over time, revision to total knee replacement may be needed in some patients.

It can be, but only when the disease pattern fits the operation. The best decision depends on your X-rays, symptoms, ligament status, function, and practical recovery conditions at home.

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