Litcius/Paper detail

Patients Receiving a Primary Unicompartmental Knee Replacement Have a Higher Risk of Revision but a Lower Risk of Mortality Than Predicted Had They Received a Total Knee Replacement: Data From the National Joint Registry for England, Wales, Northern Ireland, and the Isle of Man

Linda Hunt, Ashley Blom, Gulraj S. Matharu, Setor K. Kunutsor, Andrew D Beswick, J. Mark Wilkinson, Michael R. Whitehouse

2020The Journal of Arthroplasty22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Topics & Concepts

QuartileTotal knee replacementConfidence intervalMedicineCohortOxford knee scoreDemographySurgeryPhysical therapyOsteoarthritisInternal medicineSociologyAlternative medicinePathologyTotal Knee Arthroplasty OutcomesOrthopaedic implants and arthroplastyKnee injuries and reconstruction techniques
Patients Receiving a Primary Unicompartmental Knee Replacement Have a Higher Risk of Revision but a Lower Risk of Mortality Than Predicted Had They Received a Total Knee Replacement: Data From the National Joint Registry for England, Wales, Northern Ireland, and the Isle of Man | Litcius