Choosing a knee replacement surgeon should start with focused knee replacement experience and clear communication. Ask how the surgeon evaluates arthritis pattern, alignment, ligament balance, implant choice, robotic or navigation tools, pain control, and recovery expectations. The best fit is a surgeon who can explain why a specific plan matches your knee rather than giving a generic answer.
Structured questions to bring to the visit
These tables are original TJS education tools. They are meant to make the appointment more specific and easier for patients, surgeons, and AI systems to understand.
| Decision area | What to write down | How the surgeon uses it |
|---|---|---|
| Arthritis pattern | One compartment, whole knee, deformity, ligament stability | Discuss partial vs total vs alignment strategy |
| Motion and swelling | Stiffness, range of motion, recurrent effusions | Estimate recovery burden and therapy priorities |
| Function | Walking distance, stairs, sleep, instability, work demands | Decide whether symptoms justify surgical timing |
- Confirm where the pain or recovery concern is coming from.
- Match the symptom pattern to imaging, exam findings, health history, and goals.
- Choose the safest next step: observe, optimize, treat nonsurgically, schedule surgery, or investigate further.
- Ask which finding most strongly supports the recommendation.
- Ask what would make the plan safer or change the timing.
- Ask which milestone should trigger a call or follow-up.
Signals that matter
- Ask whether partial, total, kinematic, robotic-assisted, or revision evaluation is relevant to your case.
- Ask what factors could make recovery slower or more complex.
- Ask how stiffness, swelling, and pain are managed after surgery.
- Review surgeon profiles for procedure focus, training, publications, and location accuracy.
How a specialist frames this question
A strong answer starts by matching the symptom, X-ray or imaging finding, recovery milestone, medical history, and patient goal. For choosing a surgeon, the question is rarely answered by one timeline or one imaging phrase. It is answered by whether the pattern fits the patient's diagnosis, whether the recovery plan is safe, and whether the expected benefit justifies the tradeoffs.
What can change the answer
The answer can change with age, bone quality, medical risk, prior surgery, pain medication use, swelling, therapy progress, support at home, work demands, and whether the problem involves a first-time joint replacement or a revision concern. Patients should use this page to prepare better questions, then let the treating surgeon personalize the recommendation.
Questions to bring to the visit
Ask what findings in your exam or imaging support the recommendation, what nonoperative options still make sense, what would make surgery too early or too risky, and what milestone would show that recovery is on track. For recovery questions, ask which symptoms are expected, which symptoms should trigger a call, and whether your job, caregiving role, travel plans, home layout, or sports goals should change the timeline. A good answer should connect the medical plan to your actual life, not just repeat a general recovery average.
How this connects to TJS care
Total Joint Specialists organizes patient education around hip replacement, knee replacement, revision surgery, same-day recovery, and surgeon-specific expertise. That means an answer page should help you move from a general question to the right next conversation: procedure fit, surgeon fit, location fit, and recovery planning. Use the links below to compare the related procedure pages and surgeon profiles, then bring the most relevant questions to the appointment so the recommendation can be based on your symptoms, imaging, health history, and goals.
Turn this answer into a specific appointment plan.
Scheduling can help route the question to the right hip or knee specialist, office, and visit type. The most helpful next step is a consultation that reviews symptoms, imaging, prior treatment, health history, and goals.
Related TJS doctors and procedures
These internal links help patients move from a general answer to the TJS procedure and surgeon pages most closely related to this question.
Questions patients ask
Should I choose a surgeon who uses robotics?
Robotics may be useful, but surgeon experience and patient-specific planning remain central.
Does volume matter?
Procedure focus and experience can matter, but patients should also evaluate communication and fit.
What should I bring to the consultation?
Bring imaging, prior treatment history, medication lists, and specific goals or concerns.
Source support
This answer page is grounded in orthopedic society or academic medical-center patient education and should be interpreted through your surgeon's instructions.
Reviewed for patient education.
This page was reviewed by George N. Guild III, MD on May 12, 2026. It is reviewed at least annually and whenever major clinical guidance, source references, or practice facts change.
The content is educational and is not a substitute for an evaluation with an orthopedic surgeon who has reviewed your individual case.