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Donna Brent, 63, works out on a step machine Feb. 4 at her home in Deerfield, Ill. Decades of sports took a toll on her knees, finally leading her to have her right knee replaced in June. Almost one in 20 Americans older than 50 have had the operation.
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AP photo / Nam Y. Huh

Donna Brent, 63, works out on a step machine Feb. 4 at her home in Deerfield, Ill. Decades of sports took a toll on her knees, finally leading her to have her right knee replaced in June. Almost one in 20 Americans older than 50 have had the operation.

Knee replacement operations surge

By Lindsey Tanner

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CHICAGO –
Almost 1 in 20 Americans older than 50 – more than 4 million people – have artificial knees, according to the first national estimate showing how common these replacement joints have become in an aging population.

Doctors know that knee replacements have surged in the past decade, especially in baby boomers. But until now, there was no good fix on the number of people living with them.

The estimate is important because it shows that a big segment of the population might need future knee-related care, said Dr. Daniel Berry, president of the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons and chairman of orthopedic surgery at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. He was not involved in the research.

People with knee replacements sometimes develop knee infections or scar tissue that require additional treatment. Artificial knees also wear out; as the operations are increasingly done on younger people, many will live long enough to need a second or even third knee replacement.

The new estimate came in an analysis presented Friday at the academy’s annual meeting in San Francisco.

“These data are sobering because we didn’t know what an army of people we’ve created over the last decade,” said Elena Losina, lead author of the analysis and co-director of the Orthopedics and Arthritis Center for Outcomes Research at Harvard’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital. “The numbers will only increase, based on current trends.”

Replacement joints greatly can improve quality of life for people with worn-out knees, but they’re not risk-free and replacement is a major operation that people should not take lightly, she said.

Modern knee replacements in the United States date back to the 1970s. Since then, advances in materials and techniques, including imaging scans to create better-fitting joints, have made the implants more durable and lifelike, surgeons said.

Losina and colleagues developed their estimate by analyzing national data on the number of knee replacements done from 1998-2009, U.S. census data, death statistics and national health surveys.

For example, in 2009, more than 600,000 knee replacement operations were done nationwide. The study estimate includes people who had knee replacement operations that year and in previous years who are still living.

Overall, 4.5 million Americans are living with artificial knees. That includes an estimated 500,000 who have had at least two replacement operations on the same knee.

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Knee replacements are most common in people older than 80 – one in 10 people in this age range have them, the study found. Though they’re less prevalent in people younger than that, there are still more than 500,000 Americans in their 50s with the artificial joints. Based on current trends, operations in that age group are expected to increase.

According to the U.S. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, knee replacements tripled in people ages 45 to 64 from 1997 and 2009.

Doctors said two trends have contributed to that increase: the nation’s obesity epidemic and amateur athletes who don’t adjust workouts to spare aging or even injured joints. Both can lead to or worsen arthritis, the main reason for replacing knees.