If damage to a joint is severe enough to make life very difficult and other treatment isn't helping, your doctors may recommend surgery.
Dr Jeni Worden last medically reviewed this article in December 2010.
If damage to a joint is severe enough to make life very difficult and other treatment isn't helping, your doctors may recommend surgery.
Dr Jeni Worden last medically reviewed this article in December 2010.
Here are some of the different types of surgery options for severe arthritis:
Joint replacement is the most common form of surgery for arthritis, with around 65,000 people in the UK having a hip replaced every year, and around 70,000 people having a knee replaced. Ankles, shoulders, elbows, wrists and fingers can all be replaced too. Artificial joints don't work as well as natural joints, but they do enable about 95 per cent of people who have the operation to be free of pain for the lifetime of the joint - around 15 years, sometimes longer. Joint replacement also helps to regain a significant amount of joint movement, around 75 per cent of the range of movement of a normal joint.
One in 20 joint operations fails and complications can set in. The operation is major, so the decision to have a joint replacement shouldn't be taken lightly. If your doctor suggests it, discuss what's being offered and why. The decision will ultimately be yours.
If you want to go ahead, you'll be referred to an orthopaedic surgeon. You can ask your rheumatologist about the performance and experience of the person to whom you are being referred. If they can't help, all NHS trusts should have a Patient Advice and Liaison Service (PALS) and the Royal College of Surgeons of England website also has lots of useful advice for patients and their families.
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