| Literature DB >> 22806553 |
Norberto Confalonieri1, Cesare Chemello, Pietro Cerveri, Alfonso Manzotti.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Computer-assisted total knee replacement (TKR) has been shown to improve radiographic alignment and therefore the clinical outcome. Outliers with greater than 3° of varus or valgus malalignment in TKR can suffer higher failure rates. The aim of this study was to determine the impact of experience with both computer navigation and knee replacement surgery on the frequency of errors in intraoperative bone cuts and implant alignment, as well as the actual learning curve.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22806553 PMCID: PMC3506842 DOI: 10.1007/s10195-012-0205-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Traumatol ISSN: 1590-9921
Patient characteristics
| Group A | Group B | Group C |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Body mass index | 31.36 SD ±2.78 Range 26–35 | 31.72 SD ±2.44 Range 26–35 | 31.20 SD ±2.86 Range 26–35 | 0.79 |
| Preoperative flexion (°) | 105.4 SD ±9.67 Range 90–120 | 109.8 SD ±10.25 Range 90–120 | 107.6 SD ±8.43 Range 95–120 | 0.23 |
| Preoperative HKA angle (°) | 170.84 SD ±5.04 Range 165–183 | 171.96 SD ±5.26 Range 172–180 | 174.4 SD ±4.79 Range 166–183 | 0.38 |
Fig. 1Intraoperative control of the cuts
Fig. 2Femoral slope and tibial slope
Fig. 3Mechanical axis
Difference between the desired prosthesis alignment and alignment after first cut; number of re-cuts needed to obtain the correct angle
| Group A | Group B | Group C | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Frontal femoral component angle [fFC angle (°)] | 1.04 SD ±0.89 Range 0–3 # Re-cuts 2 | 1.20 SD ±0.87 Range 0–3 # Re-cuts 2 | 1.32 SD ±0.95 Range 0–3 # Re-cuts 3 |
| Femoral slope [FS angle (°)] | 0.52 SD ±0.77 Range 0–3 # Re-cuts 1 | 0.76 SD ±0.78 Range 0–3 # Re-cuts 1 | 1.04 SD ±0.98 Range 0–3 # Re-cuts 2 |
| Frontal tibial component angle [fTC angle (°)] | 0.80 SD ±0.91 Range 0–3 # Re-cuts 1 | 0.96 SD ±1.31 Range 0–5 # Re-cuts 4 | 1.28 SD ±1.28 Range 0–4 # Re-cuts 5 |
| Tibial slope [TS angle (°)] | 0.72 SD ±0.79 Range 0–2 # Re-cuts 0 | 0.88 SD ±0.83 Range 0–3 # Re-cuts 1 | 1.08 SD ±1.04 Range 0–3 # Re-cuts 3 |
Average postoperative angles
| Group A | Group B | Group C | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Frontal femoral component angle [fFC angle (°)] | 89.04 SD ±1.62 Range 86–92 | 88.88 SD ±1.69 Range 86–93 | 88.68 SD ±1.88 Range 86–93 |
| Frontal tibial component angle [fTC angle (°)] | 89.04 SD ±1.37 Range 86–91 | 88.82 ± 1.59 Range 85–91 | 88.52 SD ±1.63 Range 85–91 |
| Femoral slope [FS angle (°)] | 90.36 SD ±1.89 Range 87–94 | 89.92 SD ±1.78 Range 88–95 | 90.68 SD ±1.75 Range 88–94 |
| Tibial slope [TS angle (°)] | 86.72 SD ±1.84 Range 84–91 | 87.44 SD ±2.18 Range 84–92 | 88.24 SD ±2.00 Range 84–91 |
| Hip–knee–ankle angle [HKA angle (°)] | 179.28 SD ±1.06 Range 177–181 | 178.94 SD ±1.50 Range 177–182 | 178.12 SD ±1.50 Range 176–183 |
Fig. 4Analysis of postoperative angles
Fig. 5Number of cases after which there was no statistical difference among the surgeons in terms of the number of re-cuts needed (i.e., the break-even point). After 11 cases, the trainee obtained the same results as the expert
Fig. 6Number of cases after which there was no statistical difference in surgical time (i.e., the break-even point). After 9 cases, the trainee obtained the same results as the expert, and after 16 cases the beginner had caught up with the expert