A total ankle replacement is a procedure in which the doctor replaces the injured ankle joint with a plastic and metal joint.
The procedure is performed when the ankle joint is painful and is no longer working well, especially because of rheumatoid arthritis. It is used when other treatments have not worked. Arthritis from other causes is rarely a reason to do ankle replacement.
Alternatives to this procedure include:
You should ask your doctor whether any of these choices would be of benefit to you.
Within 4 weeks of the surgery, you may want to donate blood to be given back during the operation or recovery. Your doctor may also use a method for limiting your blood loss at the time of surgery.
Plan for your care and recovery after the operation, especially if you are to have general anesthesia. Allow for time to rest and find people to help you with your day-to-day duties and care for at least the first week at home.
Follow any instructions your doctor may give you. If you are to have general anesthesia, do not eat or drink anything after midnight on the day of the procedure. Do not even drink coffee, tea, or water.
No special preparation is needed for spinal or epidural anesthesia.
You will receive general, spinal, or epidural anesthesia. A general anesthetic will relax your muscles and make you feel as if you are in a deep sleep. It will prevent you from feeling pain during the operation. An epidural or spinal anesthetic is a drug that should keep you from feeling pain from the waist down during the operation.
The doctor will make a cut over your ankle and expose the ankle joint. Then he or she will move the tendons aside and separate the leg bones (tibia and fibula) from the third ankle bone (talus). The doctor will remove the joint surfaces of the leg and ankle bone and secure the artificial replacement to the leg and ankle.
The doctor will put the tendons back in place. She or he may place drains in the cut to drain any blood and then close the cut.
You may be in the hospital for 1 to 4 days, depending on how quickly you heal. The ankle may be in a splint or cast to keep it stable. You may need blood transfusions. You may be given a blood thinner to avoid a blood clot to the lungs and to prevent swelling. A period of physical therapy is often required after ankle replacement. In a few weeks you should be able to walk on the new ankle.
Ask your doctor for other guidelines and when you should come back for a checkup.
You may regain use of the ankle and be able to walk without pain, help, or use of a cane or walker.
You should ask your doctor how these risks apply to you.
Call the doctor immediately if:
Call the doctor during office hours if: