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Patients undergoing robotic arm-assisted total knee arthroplasty have a greater improvement in knee-specific pain but not in function.

Nicholas David ClementSteven GallowayJenny BaronKaren SmithDavid J WeirDavid J Deehan
Published in: The bone & joint journal (2024)
Patients undergoing rTKA had a clinically meaningful greater improvement in their knee pain over the first 12 months, and were more likely to have fulfilment of their expectation of daytime pain relief compared with patients undergoing mTKA. However, rTKA was not associated with a clinically significant greater knee-specific function or HRQoL, according to current definitions.
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