| Literature DB >> 20338042 |
Jörg Lützner1, Frank Krummenauer, Klaus-Peter Günther, Stephan Kirschner.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Correct rotational alignment of the femoral and tibial component is an important factor for successful TKA. The transepicondylar axis is widely accepted as a reference for the femoral component. There is not a standard reference for the tibial component. CT scans were used in this study to measure which of 2 tibial landmarks most reliably reproduces a correct femoro-tibial rotational alignment in TKA.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20338042 PMCID: PMC2858718 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-11-57
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Figure 1Determination of rotational mismatch between femoral and tibial component. a: Line through femoral fixation pegs for determination of the femoral component rotation, b: Angle between rotational alignment of the femoral and a line along the posterior border of the tibial component for determination of the tibial rotation.
Figure 2Determination of the "true" rotational variance between femur and tibia: Transepicondylar axis (a) is superimposed to the tibia and a perpendicular line is drawn through the rotational centre of the tibial tray (fixation peg for rotating platform, b). These lines are superimposed to a slice where the tibial tuberosity is visible (c). The tibial tuberosity is divided into three parts (d). The angle between a line from the medial border of the tibial tuberosity to the rotational center and the line perpendicular to the transepicondylar axis is measured (e). The angle between a line from the lateral border of the medial third of the tibial tuberosity to the rotational center and the line perpendicular to the transepicondylar axis is measured (f).
Figure 3"True" rotational variance between femur (transepicondylar axis) and different tibial landmarks (medial third or medial border of the tuberosity). (Negative values indicate femoral external rotation relative to the tibia, positive values indicate relative femoral internal rotation; Box plot horizontals indicate medians and quartiles, verticals indicate minumum and maximum observations. Circles and asterixes indicate statistical outliers).
"True" rotational variance between femur (transepicondylar axis) and different tibial landmarks: medial border or medial third.
| "true" rotational variance | medial border | medial third | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 17.4° | -1.6° | ||
| -13.8° to 32.9° | -24.1° to 15.9° | p < 0.001 | |
| 4% | 68% | ||
| 15% | 85% | ||
| 69% | 98% | ||
Negative values indicate femoral external rotation relative to the tibia, positive values indicate relative femoral internal rotation.