In that case I can confirm same as
@fuentemoon for 99% of the time. A friend did have it done twice in the same knee because of the glue issue; But I think the first one had been done in the 1980's or 90's. She's had no issues with it since the re-do. So I'd say a lot has been improved!
Remember all the stats and stories are past performance, sometimes very very old, and improvements are always occurring.
An elderly lady in her 80's felt her new knee (this was about 2014?) was wobbly to the sides and unpredictable. So she used a cane. She had no pain though. She may not have really committed to the physical therapy, she had the beginnings of dementia, her executive functioning wasn't really there, & that's what you need to make yourself work through it and continue to work it despite your (normal) pain.
It helped me (hip) to take a dose of pain meds before PT appointments, even after I didn't need to take them generally when doing the home PT. It helps. The PT appointments involved harder things.
Just be prepared for the long game. Commit to the therapy - and ask for it! Some institutions do not push it, hard to believe.
I heard from DH about a dental hygienist he saw who had their hip replaced a few years ago, there was no PT required and she didn't know to ask, and now she has pain while sitting and standing at work.
Finally, my experience (hip) taught me the patience needed with these things. Healing only goes so fast, and the PT has to work hand in hand with that.
Tax: Anna looking alert out the back of the coop while I cleaned it today
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