| Literature DB >> 23304590 |
David A Hayes1, Larry E Miller, Jon E Block.
Abstract
Osteoarthritis (OA) is a leading cause of disability in middle-aged and older adults with the prevalence expected to increase by 40% by 2025. This dramatic projected increase in OA reflects, in large part, the alarming obesity epidemic. Indeed, it is now well understood that abnormal loading across the knee joint due to malalignment and/or excessive weight gain is responsible for accelerating OA progression. Consequently, there is a therapeutic need for alternative knee OA treatments that directly address joint overload to fill the gap between ineffective conservative care and invasive joint-modifying surgical procedures. We describe two cases that presented with bilateral knee OA resistant to conservative treatments, each with one knee previously and unsuccessfully treated with high tibial osteotomy to improve alignment and the contralateral knee successfully treated with a joint-preserving, load-absorbing implant (KineSpring Knee Implant System).Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23304590 PMCID: PMC3523577 DOI: 10.1155/2012/297326
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Orthop ISSN: 2090-6757
Figure 1Medial view of the KineSpring Knee Implant System.
Figure 2Components of the KineSpring Knee Implant System.
Figure 3Anterior (left) and medial (right) radiographic view of the left knee at pretreatment (a) and at 3 years demonstrating the KineSpring System in situ (b).
Figure 4(a) Anterior view of the right knee with pre-treatment magnetic resonance imaging (a) and anterior (left) and medial (right) 1-year radiographs demonstrating the KineSpring System in situ (b).