Varunam Super Speciality Hospital

  • June 9, 2026
  • varunam
  • 0
Nagpur Best Orthopedic Surgeon
Experience : 15 years / 15000+ Successfully Surgery completed
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Knee replacement is one of the most extensively studied and refined surgeries in modern medicine  but it’s also one of the most misunderstood. Most patients arrive at a first consultation carrying a few myths absorbed from well-meaning relatives, social media, or hearsay about someone’s cousin’s neighbour’s surgery 20 years ago. This post addresses the 10 most common misconceptions, with clear medical context. Knowing what’s actually true makes the decision easier and removes a lot of unnecessary fear.

Myth 1: "Knee replacement should be delayed as long as possible."

The reality: This is probably the most damaging myth. Patients often endure 5-10 years of progressively worsening pain, immobility, and dependence on others because they’ve been told to “wait as long as possible”. The waiting causes its own harm muscle wasting, weight gain, secondary issues with the back and hip, social withdrawal, and depression. 

The correct timing is when conservative treatments (medication, physiotherapy, viscosupplementation injections, weight reduction) no longer give acceptable pain control and quality of life. For most patients, this happens between ages 60-72. Delaying past this point doesn’t preserve the knee – it just preserves the suffering. Patients who undergo replacement at the appropriate time recover faster, regain more function, and are more satisfied long-term.

Myth 2: "Knee replacement is extremely painful."

The reality: Modern multimodal pain management has transformed the post- operative experience. Most patients at a quality hospital today receive a combinationof pre-emptive analgesia, regional nerve blocks, periarticular injections, and oral medications that keep post-op pain at moderate levels  typically 3-5 on a 10-point scale during the first few days.

Patients are usually walking with support within 24 hours of surgery. By week 2-3, daily pain levels are usually below pre-surgery levels. This isn’t “painless”  surgery is surgery, and we don’t pretend otherwise  but the experience is far more manageable than the myth suggests.

Myth 3: "After knee replacement you can't bend your knee normally."

The reality: Modern high-flexion implants allow comfortable bending to 130-135 degrees, which covers nearly every daily activity including squatting (with care), climbing stairs normally, sitting on the floor, and getting in and out of low chairs. Some patients regain deeper flexion than this with diligent rehabilitation.

The actual limitation isn’t the implant it’s how much soft-tissue stiffness existed before surgery and how committed the patient is to post-op physiotherapy. A patient who couldn’t bend the knee past 80 degrees pre-surgery will not magically bend to140 degrees after.

Concerned about whether you’ll be able to do specific activities after surgery? Send Dr. Utsav details of your lifestyle and current condition on WhatsApp – get a realistic prediction for your case. WhatsApp Now →

Myth 4: "Knee replacement lasts only 10 years."

The reality: This was true 25 years ago. With current implant materials (cobalt-chrome with cross-linked polyethylene, or oxinium/ceramic surfaces), 90-95% of knee replacements function well at 15 years, and 80-85% are still functional at 20+ years. Younger active patients may see slightly faster wear; sedentary older patients may have the implant outlive them.

The most common reasons for early failure aren’t implant wear – they’re infection (rare, but devastating), traumatic injury, or surgical positioning errors. This is why surgeon experience and infection-control hospital standards matter so much.

Myth 5: "Once you have knee replacement, you can never sit cross-legged or squat."

The reality: This is partially true and partially false. Deep squatting (heels touching buttocks) is generally not recommended even with modern implants. But cross-legged sitting (sukhasana style), Indian-style floor sitting, and squat-style toilet use are all possible with high-flexion implants – though they require care, technique, andgradual training. Patients in India can and do return to floor-based cultural and religious practices after knee replacement, though most surgeons recommend chair-based alternatives where possible to maximise implant life. (We have a dedicated post on this topic – see related reading below.)

Myth 6: "Knee replacement causes long-term metal poisoning."

The reality: This concern occasionally spreads online from old stories about metal-on- metal hip implants from the 2000s – implants that were withdrawn from market and are not used today. Modern knee replacements use cobalt-chrome alloys with polyethylene or ceramic bearing surfaces. The minute amount of metal ion release is well within biologically safe limits and has been studied extensively. There is no  credible evidence linking modern knee implants to systemic metal toxicity.

Myth 7: "If both knees are bad, you have to do them one at a time."

The reality: Bilateral (both knees in one surgery) knee replacement is a well- established option for medically fit patients. The advantages: one anaesthesia, one hospital stay, one recovery period, lower total cost. The disadvantages: more demanding recovery period, slightly higher risk of post-operative complications (which is why patient selection matters), and requires good upper-body strength and home support.

For patients aged under 70, in reasonable health, with both knees significantly affected, single-sitting bilateral replacement is often the right choice. For older patients or those with significant comorbidities, staged surgery (6-8 weeks apart) is safer.

Myth 8: "Robotic knee replacement is significantly better than conventional."

The reality: Robotic-assisted knee replacement offers some real benefits – more precise bone cuts, better implant positioning in complex anatomies, less soft-tissue disruption in some cases. But it’s not a magic bullet. Long-term outcomes (5+ years) between robotic and well-performed conventional knee replacement remain similar in most published studies.

What matters far more than the technology is the surgeon’s experience, their understanding of soft-tissue balancing, and the hospital’s infection-control standards. A skilled surgeon with conventional instruments will outperform an inexperienced surgeon with the most advanced robot. Choose the surgeon first, the technology second.

Myth 9: "After knee replacement, you can't walk long distances or exercise."

The reality: Most patients walk further and exercise more after recovery than they did in the years before surgery – because the pain that was holding them back is gone. Walking, cycling, swimming, golf, doubles tennis, hiking, and yoga are all comfortably possible. High-impact activities like running marathons or competitive singles tennis are not recommended, but most patients can return to recreational sport.

The goal of surgery is restored function and quality of life – not a permanent restriction list. Patients sometimes underestimate how much they’ll be able to do.

Myth 10: "Knee replacement is only for very old people."

The reality: The average age at first knee replacement in India has dropped from 68 in 2005 to about 58 today, and continues to fall. Severe arthritis, post-traumatic damage, rheumatoid disease, or AVN can require knee replacement in patients in their 40s or even late 30s. With current implant longevity (15-20+ years) and the availability of revision surgery, age is no longer the gatekeeper it once was.

The right question isn’t “am I too young?” but “is my quality of life acceptable, and have non-surgical options been adequately tried?”

Have your own questions about knee replacement? 

Dr. Utsav personally reviews patient queries. Whether you’re considering surgery in 6 months or 6 years, get clear, honest answers based on your specific situation. WhatsApp: Start conversation | Call: +91 8177966477

FAQ

Is knee replacement surgery worth it for someone in their 60s?

For most patients with significant arthritis-related pain and functional limitation in their 60s, knee replacement provides substantial improvement in quality of life. Outcomes are statistically excellent at this age, and the implant typically lasts the patient’s lifetime.

Can knee replacement be reversed?

Knee replacement is not reversible in the conventional sense, but revision surgery replacing a worn or failed implant  is possible. Revision is more complex than primary surgery but is a well-established option.

How long is the actual surgery?

A standard total knee replacement takes 60-90 minutes per knee. Bilateral surgery takes 2-2.5 hours total.

Will I set off airport metal detectors?

Yes, modern knee implants typically trigger metal detectors. Patients are issued an implant ID card to show airport security; the metal poses no risk during scanning.

Can knee replacement be done laparoscopically?

No – knee replacement requires direct access to the joint, but minimally invasive (MIS) techniques use shorter incisions and less muscle disruption than traditional open surgery.

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