COMPARISON OF TROCHLEAR GROOVES IN CONTEMPORARY TOTAL KNEE DESIGNS TO NATIVE TROCHLEAR GROOVE

Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery-british Volume(2017)

引用 23|浏览4
暂无评分
摘要
Background Patellofemoral complications have dwindled with contemporary total knee designs that market anatomic trochlear grooves that intend to preserve normal patella kinematics. While most reports of patellofemoral complications address patella and its replacement approach, they do not focus on shape of trochlear grooves in different prostheses [1]. The purpose of this study was to characterize 3D geometry of trochlear grooves of contemporary total knee designs (NexGen, Genesis II, Logic, and Attune) defined in terms of sulcus angle and medial-lateral offset with respect to midline of femoral component in coronal view and to compare to those of native femurs derived from 20 osteoarthritic patient CT scans. Materials and Methods Using 3D models of each implant and native femur, sulcus location and orientation were obtained by fitting a spline to connect sulcus points marked at 90°, 105°, 130°, and 145° of femoral flexion (Fig A). Implant reference plane orientations were established using inner facets of distal and posterior flanges. Reference planes of native femurs were defined using protocols developed by Eckhoff et al. [2] where coronal plane was defined using femoral posterior condyles and greater trochanter. In the coronal plane, a best fit line was used to measure sulcus angle and medial-lateral offset with respect to midline at the base of trochlear groove (Fig B). Results With exception to Logic (0° sulcus angle u0026 0 mm offset), contemporary knee designs include high valgus angulations (4° to 18°) with laterally-biased offsets (3 to 5 mm). The native sulcus angle on average was slightly valgus, but varied significantly among the cohort (−0.2° ± 4.6°). Native trochlear groove offset was biased laterally (2.5 ± 1.7 mm). Discussion We observed a considerable geometric deviation between native femur and implants in terms of sulcus angle while both geometries displayed comparable lateral bias at the base of trochlear groove. Similar to past studies by Iranpour et al. [4] and Feinstein et al. [5], a large variation in sulcus angle was observed among the selected native femurs with an average of small valgus angulation (Fig C). However, most contemporary trochlear grooves are biased towards higher valgus angulations. Retrieval and registry studies have shown that NexGen trochlear groove design (4° sulcus angle) has been shown to better accommodate natural patellas, which highlights that the differences among designs may be significant [5,6]. It remains unclear which features specifically translate to better patellafemoral outcomes, which is a merit for further study. Conflict of Interest: None Figure A. Sulcus points defined at various flexion angles. Figure B. Best fit line to measure ML-offset and sulcus angle. Figure C. Sulcus angle comparison to past studies For any figures or tables, please contact authors directly (see Info u0026 Metrics tab above).
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要