Subscribe to RSS
DOI: 10.1055/a-2779-0459
Arthrofibrosis After Total Knee Arthroplasty Managed with Manipulation Under Anesthesia
Authors
Abstract
Arthrofibrosis after total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is the result of excessive scar formation because of the inflammatory insult of surgery. This formation can lead to significant loss of range of motion, pain, and functional deficits requiring further treatment. Although much has been researched on arthrofibrosis, it continues to lack definitive diagnostic testing. This has led to an array of approaches and treatments to relieve patients of this complication. In response to the inflammatory insult caused by TKA, arthrofibrosis occurs because of an overactivation and proliferation of myofibroblasts. This leads to an abundant deposition of type I collagen and scar tissue formation. This general cascade has been found to be associated with multiple signaling pathways involving primarily transforming growth factor-beta. Additionally, there is a multifactorial component of risk factors and comorbidities, which contribute to the formation of arthrofibrosis. Arthrofibrosis is diagnosed as both a clinical diagnosis and a diagnosis of exclusion. Using the patient's history, clinical examination, and diagnostic testing to rule out other etiologies, one can obtain the diagnosis of arthrofibrosis. While stiffness is an umbrella term that is commonly used interchangeably with arthrofibrosis, it is imperative to use the diagnostic testing to systematically rule out other causes of stiffness. There is no definitive imaging, biopsy, or biomarker test specific for arthrofibrosis currently, which makes obtaining a definitive diagnosis difficult. Nonoperative and operative treatment options are available for the treatment of arthrofibrosis. Most conservative approaches begin with physical therapy, appropriate pain management, and oral anti-inflammatory medication. Treatment options rise in invasiveness with manipulation under anesthesia, arthroscopic lysis of adhesions, open lysis of adhesions, and ultimately revision TKA. This review will focus on the role of manipulation under anesthesia in the setting of arthrofibrosis.
Publication History
Received: 01 October 2025
Accepted: 23 December 2025
Accepted Manuscript online:
30 December 2025
Article published online:
22 January 2026
© 2026. Thieme. All rights reserved.
Thieme Medical Publishers, Inc.
333 Seventh Avenue, 18th Floor, New York, NY 10001, USA
-
References
- 1 Shichman I, Roof M, Askew N. et al. Projections and epidemiology of primary hip and knee arthroplasty in Medicare patients to 2040-2060. JBJS Open Access 2023; 8 (01) e22.00112
- 2 Owen AR, Tibbo ME, van Wijnen AJ, Pagnano MW, Berry DJ, Abdel MP. Acquired idiopathic stiffness after contemporary total knee arthroplasty: incidence, risk factors, and results over 25 years. J Arthroplasty 2021; 36 (08) 2980-2985
- 3 Schiavone Panni A, Cerciello S, Vasso M, Tartarone M. Stiffness in total knee arthroplasty. J Orthop Traumatol 2009; 10 (03) 111-118
- 4 Cheuy VA, Foran JRH, Paxton RJ, Bade MJ, Zeni JA, Stevens-Lapsley JE. Arthrofibrosis associated with total knee arthroplasty. J Arthroplasty 2017; 32 (08) 2604-2611
- 5 Schairer WW, Vail TP, Bozic KJ. What are the rates and causes of hospital readmission after total knee arthroplasty?. Clin Orthop Relat Res 2014; 472 (01) 181-187
- 6 Yercan HS, Sugun TS, Bussiere C, Ait Si Selmi T, Davies A, Neyret P. Stiffness after total knee arthroplasty: prevalence, management and outcomes. Knee 2006; 13 (02) 111-117
- 7 Kalson NS, Borthwick LA, Mann DA. et al. International consensus on the definition and classification of fibrosis of the knee joint. Bone Joint J 2016; 98-B (11) 1479-1488
- 8 Ramos MS, Pasqualini I, Surace PA, Molloy RM, Deren ME, Piuzzi NS. Arthrofibrosis after total knee arthroplasty: a critical analysis review. JBJS Rev 2023; 11 (12) e23.00140
- 9 Stephenson JJ, Quimbo RA, Gu T. Knee-attributable medical costs and risk of re-surgery among patients utilizing non-surgical treatment options for knee arthrofibrosis in a managed care population. Curr Med Res Opin 2010; 26 (05) 1109-1118
- 10 Flick TR, Wang CX, Patel AH, Hodo TW, Sherman WF, Sanchez FL. Arthrofibrosis after total knee arthroplasty: patients with keloids at risk. J Orthop Traumatol 2021; 22 (01) 1
- 11 Usher KM, Zhu S, Mavropalias G, Carrino JA, Zhao J, Xu J. Pathological mechanisms and therapeutic outlooks for arthrofibrosis. Bone Res 2019; 7: 9
- 12 Maloney WJ. The stiff total knee arthroplasty: evaluation and management. J Arthroplasty 2002; 17 (4, Suppl 1): 71-73
- 13 Su EP, Su SL, Della Valle AG. Stiffness after TKR: how to avoid repeat surgery. Orthopedics 2010; 33 (09) 658
- 14 Kendall RT, Feghali-Bostwick CA. Fibroblasts in fibrosis: novel roles and mediators. Front Pharmacol 2014; 5: 123
- 15 Freeman TA, Parvizi J, Dela Valle CJ, Steinbeck MJ. Mast cells and hypoxia drive tissue metaplasia and heterotopic ossification in idiopathic arthrofibrosis after total knee arthroplasty. Fibrogenesis Tissue Repair 2010; 3: 17
- 16 Limberg AK, Salib CG, Tibbo ME. et al. Immune cell populations differ in patients undergoing revision total knee arthroplasty for arthrofibrosis. Sci Rep 2022; 12 (01) 22627
- 17 Border WA, Noble NA. Transforming growth factor beta in tissue fibrosis. N Engl J Med 1994; 331 (19) 1286-1292
- 18 Liu RM, Gaston Pravia KA. Oxidative stress and glutathione in TGF-beta-mediated fibrogenesis. Free Radic Biol Med 2010; 48 (01) 1-15
- 19 Hengartner NE, Fiedler J, Schrezenmeier H, Huber-Lang M, Brenner RE. Crucial role of IL1beta and C3a in the in vitro-response of multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells to inflammatory mediators of polytrauma. PLoS One 2015; 10 (01) e0116772
- 20 Li L, Huang W, Li K. et al. Metformin attenuates gefitinib-induced exacerbation of pulmonary fibrosis by inhibition of TGF-β signaling pathway. Oncotarget 2015; 6 (41) 43605-43619
- 21 Boldt JG, Munzinger UK, Zanetti M, Hodler J. Arthrofibrosis associated with total knee arthroplasty: gray-scale and power Doppler sonographic findings. AJR Am J Roentgenol 2004; 182 (02) 337-340
- 22 Attard V, Li CY, Self A. et al. Quantification of intra-articular fibrosis in patients with stiff knee arthroplasties using metal-reduction MRI. Bone Joint J 2020; 102-B (10) 1331-1340
- 23 Stinton SK, Beckley SJ, Branch TP. Efficacy of non-operative treatment of patients with knee arthrofibrosis using high-intensity home mechanical therapy: a retrospective review of 11,000+ patients. J Orthop Surg Res 2022; 17 (01) 337
- 24 Rauzi MR, Foran JRH, Bade MJ. Multimodal conservative management of arthrofibrosis after total knee arthroplasty compared to manipulation under anesthesia: a feasibility study with retrospective cohort comparison. Pilot Feasibility Stud 2022; 8 (01) 71
- 25 Hyodo K, Masuda T, Aizawa J, Jinno T, Morita S. Hip, knee, and ankle kinematics during activities of daily living: a cross-sectional study. Braz J Phys Ther 2017; 21 (03) 159-166
- 26 Baum KS, Luo TD, Comadoll S, Marois A, Langfitt M, Shields J. Alternative technique for knee manipulation under anesthesia. Arthroplast Today 2017; 4 (04) 452-453
- 27 Akhtar M, Razick D, Seibel A, Asad S, Shekhar A, Shelton T. Outcomes of early versus delayed manipulation under anesthesia for stiffness following total knee arthroplasty: a systematic review and meta-analysis. J Arthroplasty 2024; 39 (11) 2872-2879
- 28 Colacchio ND, Abela D, Bono JV, Shah VM, Bono OJ, Scott RD. Efficacy of manipulation under anesthesia beyond three months following total knee arthroplasty. Arthroplast Today 2019; 5 (04) 515-520
- 29 Mohammed R, Syed S, Ahmed N. Manipulation under anaesthesia for stiffness following knee arthroplasty. Ann R Coll Surg Engl 2009; 91 (03) 220-223
- 30 Hody S, Croisier JL, Bury T, Rogister B, Leprince P. Eccentric muscle contractions: risks and benefits. Front Physiol 2019; 10: 536
- 31 Patel A, Reynolds G, Stitgen A, Ghanem E, Nuelle C. Gravity-assisted manipulation (GAM) technique for the treatment of knee arthrofibrosis. Arthrosc Tech 2023; 12 (12) e2181-e2185
- 32 Haffar A, Goh GS, Fillingham YA, Torchia MT, Lonner JH. Treatment of arthrofibrosis and stiffness after total knee arthroplasty: an updated review of the literature. Int Orthop 2022; 46 (06) 1253-1279
- 33 Chandi SK, Hawes JD, Kolin DA. et al. Nearly 14-fold increased risk of manipulation under anesthesia after total knee arthroplasty when previous contralateral total knee arthroplasty required manipulation under anesthesia. J Arthroplasty 2024; 39 (9S2): S449-S453
- 34 Abdel MP, Salmons HI, Larson DR. et al. The Chitranjan S. Ranawat Award: manipulation under anesthesia to treat postoperative stiffness after total knee arthroplasty: a multicenter randomized clinical trial. J Arthroplasty 2024; 39 (8S1): S9 , 14.e1
- 35 Chaudhry H, Bhandari M. Cochrane in CORR: continuous passive motion following total knee arthroplasty in people with arthritis (review). Clin Orthop Relat Res 2015; 473 (11) 3348-3354
- 36 van Duren BH, Lee K, Firth AM. et al. Postoperative continuous passive motion does not improve the range of movement achieved after manipulation under anesthetic for stiffness in total knee replacement. Arthroplast Today 2024; 27: 101397