| Literature DB >> 31191853 |
Xiaoyu Liu1, Zhenxian Chen2, Yongchang Gao2, Jing Zhang2, Zhongmin Jin1,3,4.
Abstract
High tibial osteotomy becomes increasingly important in the treatment of cartilage damage or osteoarthritis of the medial compartment with concurrent varus deformity. HTO produces a postoperative valgus limb alignment with shifting the load-bearing axis of the lower limb laterally. However, maximizing procedural success and postoperative knee function still possess many difficulties. The key to improve the postoperative satisfaction and long-term survival is the understanding of the vital biomechanics of HTO in essence. This review article discussed the alignment principles, surgical technique, and fixation plate of HTO as well as the postoperative gait, musculoskeletal dynamics, and contact mechanics of the knee joint. We aimed to highlight the recent findings and progresses on the biomechanics of HTO. The biomechanical studies on HTO are still insufficient in the areas of gait analysis, joint kinematics, and joint contact mechanics. Combining musculoskeletal dynamics modelling and finite element analysis will help comprehensively understand in vivo patient-specific biomechanics after HTO.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31191853 PMCID: PMC6525872 DOI: 10.1155/2019/8363128
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Healthc Eng ISSN: 2040-2295 Impact factor: 2.682
Figure 1Flow chart.
Indications for UKA, HTO, and overlaps between treatments.
| UKA | HTO or UKA | HTO | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | >55 years | 55–65 years | <65 years |
| Activity level | Low demands | Moderately active | Active |
| Weight (BMI) | <30 | Any | |
| Alignment | 0–5° | 5–10° | 5–15° |
| AP instability | No to grade I | No to grade I | Any |
| ML instability | No to grade I | No to grade I | No to grade II |
| ROM | Arc 90° and <5° flexion contracture | Arc 100° and <5° flexion contracture | Arc 120° and <5° flexion contracture |
| Arthrosis severity | Any | Ahlback II | Ahlback I-II |
UKA = medial unicompartmental knee arthroplasty; HTO = high tibial osteotomy; BMI = body mass index; AP instability = anteroposterior instability; ML instability = mediolateral instability; instability grading: according to the American Medical Association (grade I = 0–5 mm; grade II = 5–10 mm; grade III = >10 mm; no hard stop); arthrosis severity = medial compartment arthrosis according to Ahlback classification, assuming that lateral and patellofemoral compartments are intact.
Figure 2Radiographic lower limb alignment assessment. The mechanical axis of the limb (red line) is defined by a line from the center of the femoral head to the medial tibial spine and a line from the medial tibial spine to the center of the ankle. The weight-bearing line (also represented by the red line, as this knee has normal alignment of 0°) is defined by a line from the center of the femoral head to the center of the ankle joint. The anatomic axis of the limb (black line) is defined by mid-diaphyseal lines in the femur and tibia. In a varus knee, the weight-bearing axis passes medial to the medial tibial spine. In a neutral knee, the weight-bearing axis passes through the medial tibial spine. In a valgus knee, the weight-bearing axis passes lateral to the medial tibial spine [32].
Figure 3Schematic of open-wedge HTO (a) and closed-wedge HTO (b) of a knee with varus deformity.
Comparison of the clinical results between open-wedge (OWHTO) and closed-wedge (CWHTO).
| Year | Papers | Patients | OWHTO | CWHTO | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OW | CW | ||||
| 2014 | Duivenvoorden et al. [ | 45 | 47 | More complications | More early conversions to total knee arthroplasty with six years |
| 2014 | Van Egmond [ | 25 | 25 | Patella baja leads to patellofemoral complaints and worse results | Better satisfactory and score with an average of 7.9 years |
| 2014 | Deie et al. [ | 9 | 12 | Reduced knee varus moment and lateral thrust | Little effect on reducing lateral thrust |
| 2015 | Duivenvoorden et al. [ | 112 | 354 | Higher survival ratio, 15% serious adverse events, 13% adverse events | 13% serious adverse events, 6% adverse events |
| 2016 | Sun et al. [ | 740 | 743 | Increased the posterior slope angle and limb length; decreased the patellar height; higher accuracy of correction | Higher incidence of opposite cortical fracture |
| 2017 | Wu et al. [ | 1274 | 1308 | Wider range of motion; greater posterior tibial slope angle; lesser patellar height | No significant difference in HKA and mean angle of correction |
| 2018 | Lee et al. [ | 127 | 175 | The increase in leg length had a positive correlation with the degree of correction | The decrease in leg length was negligible |
Changes in kinematics after HTO.
| Year | Author | Patients | Duration | Gait parameter |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | Lind et al. [ | 11 male patients with medial OA | Before 12 months and after medial OWHTO | (1) Mean maximum varus angle during stance was reduced from 13.5° to 5.4°(normal 6.8°) |
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| 2015 | Leitch et al. [ | 14 patients with varus alignment and OA | Before 6 and 12 months after OWHTO | (1) Speed increased after surgery. |
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| 2015 | Marriott et al. [ | 33 patients with varus | Before 2 and 5 years after ACL reconstruction and HTO | (1) The means of valgus, flexion, and internal rotation angle increased by 7.79°, 3.80°, and 7.07°, respectively, with 5 years |
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| 2017 | Da Silva et al. [ | 21 patients with OWHTO compared to the control group (16) | Short-term results of HTO of 6 months | (1) No significant changes in stride length and speed were observed in the post-op period |
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| 2017 | Morin et al. [ | 21 HTO patients | Preoperatively and at 1 year postoperatively | (1) The preoperative median of 7° varus (1–11°) was corrected to 3° valgus (0–6°) |
Changes in knee moment after HTO.
| Year | Author | Patients | Duration | Force or moment analysis | The influence of nonsurgical limb |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | Bhatnagar and Jenkyn [ | 30 HTO patients | Pre-HTO, 6 and 12 months post-HTO | (1) ML and MLR were reduced significantly by 0.56% BW and 1.0, respectively | — |
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| 2013 | Meyer et al. [ | A single subject: Implanted with a tibial prosthesis | — | (1) Total contact force may be changing | — |
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| 2013 | Lind et al. [ | 11 male patients with medial OA | Before 12 months and after OWHTO | (1) Mean maximum KAM reduced from 3.9 to 2.7 (% Bw | KAM increased postoperatively from 3.3 to 4.1 (% Bw |
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| 2015 | Leitch et al. [ | 14 patients with varus and OA | Before, 6 and 12 months after OWHTO | The peak KAM, KFM, and IRM all decreased significantly after HTO during walking and stair ascent with sustained (12 months) changes in all three orthogonal planes | IRM was higher during stair ascent, while the peak KAM was lower |
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| 2015 | Marriott et al. [ | 33 patients with varus | Before, 2 and 5 years after ACL reconstruction and HTO | (1) The EKAM and KFM in the surgical limb decreased significantly in the peak. | (1) KAM increase slightly. |
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| 2017 | Da Silva et al. [ | 21 patients with OWHTO | Short-term results of HTO of 6 months | (1) The peak of KAM and KFM was reduced and close to the values of the control group in the coronal plane | — |
Knee contact mechanics of HTO.
| Year | Author | Data | Conclusion | Limitation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2017 | Nakayama et al. [ | (1) The 3D bone model was derived from human bone digital anatomy media and only included the distal femur and proximal tibia | (1) The obliquity angle increases laterally directed shear stress | (1) Due to the data source, these results cannot be generalized and applied to all patients with osteoarthritis undergoing osteotomy | |
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| 2017 | Zheng et al. [ | (1) MRI data of a healthy participant. | (1) Providing a platform for noninvasive, patient-specific preoperative planning of the osteotomy for medial compartment knee osteoarthritis | (1) Did not consider the whole gait cycle | |
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| 2018 | Trad et al. [ | The 3D model of the right lower limb was extracted from a 3D anonymous human skeleton | (1) The model agreed with the experimental and numerical results | (1) The use of the geometry of a knee model artificially created and not the one specifically developed for a pathological knee | |
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| 2018 | Martay et al. [ | (1) MRI data of three healthy subjects. 2. Marker trajectory data and GRF data during level walking | Correcting the weight-bearing axis to 55% tibial width (1.7°–1.9° valgus) optimally distributes medial and lateral stresses/pressures | (1) Simulation on healthy knees | |