The mid‑term and long‑term effects of tourniquet use in total knee arthroplasty: systematic review
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Springer
Materia
Tourniquet Total knee arthroplasty Total knee replacement Long-term outcome TKA
Date
2022-05-12Referencia bibliográfica
Rafaqat, W... [et al.]. The mid-term and long-term effects of tourniquet use in total knee arthroplasty: systematic review. J EXP ORTOP 9, 42 (2022). [https://doi.org/10.1186/s40634-022-00471-1]
Abstract
Purpose: A tourniquet is routinely used during total knee arthroplasty (TKA) to reduce intra-operative hemorrhage,
though surgery without a tourniquet is becoming popular. To address concerns about the effect of blood at cement
interfaces on long-term implant stability, we conducted a systematic review among patients undergoing total knee
arthroplasty to determine if TKA with a tourniquet, compared to TKA without a tourniquet or with reduced tourniquet
duration, is associated with better mid-term and long-term implant stability.
Methods: A literature search was conducted without language restriction in PubMed, Cochrane database and Web
of Science from conception to 17th March, 2021. Prospective cohorts, randomized and observational, that compared
tourniquet use with a control group, followed patients for 3 months or more and reported outcomes concerning
implant stability, limb function, pain and inflammation. Article selection, quality assessment according to the Revised
Cochrane risk assessment scale and Newcastle Ottawa Scale, and data extraction were conducted in duplicate. PROSPERO:
CRD42020179020.
Results: The search yielded 4868 articles, from which 16 randomized controlled trials (RCT) and four prospective cohort
studies, evaluating outcomes of 1884 knees, were included. Eleven RCTs were evaluated to be low overall risk of bias,
five RCTs had some concerns and four cohort studies were good quality. Few studies showed benefits of tourniquet use
in mid-term implant stability (1/6), pain (1/11) and limb inflammation (1/5), and long-term implant stability (1/1). One
study reported a significantly improved range of motion (1/14) while another reported significantly reduced quadriceps
strength (1/6) in the tourniquet group. The remaining studies reported non-significant effect of tourniquet use.
Conclusion: Although few studies indicated benefits of tourniquet use in mid-term pain, limb inflammation, implant
loosening and function, and long-term implant loosening, the majority of studies report no significant advantage of
tourniquet use in total knee arthroplasty.