| Literature DB >> 33054780 |
M R Bénard1, R F M van Doremalen2, A B Wymenga3, P J C Heesterbeek4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In total knee arthroplasty (TKA) a flexible intramedullary rod can be used to account for sagittal bowing of the distal femur. Although patients report better post-operative functional outcome when the flexible rod was used, it is unknown how the use of the flexible rod affects the placement of the femoral TKA component, and how this relates to activities of daily living. It is expected that the use of the flexible rod will result in a more flexed femoral component, a larger patellar tendon moment arm, and consequently in better functional outcome. The goal of this study is to compare the flexible rod to the standard intramedullary rod in primary TKA in terms of fit of the TKA, functional outcome, and sizing of the femoral component.Entities:
Keywords: Femoral bowing; Functional outcome; Intramedullary rod; Sagittal fit; Total knee arthroplasty
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33054780 PMCID: PMC7557004 DOI: 10.1186/s13018-020-01989-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Orthop Surg Res ISSN: 1749-799X Impact factor: 2.359
The inclusion and exclusion criteria of the subjects
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Inclusion criteria | • Patient with non-inflammatory knee osteoarthritis which is radiologically confirmed and which requires total knee replacement. • Age between 40 and 75 years, inclusive. • Patient plans to be available for follow-up until 2 years post-operative. • Patient is in stable health and is free of or treated for cardiac, pulmonary, hematological, or other conditions that would pose excessive operative risk. • Patient has < 10° fixed (non-correctable) varus or valgus deformity of the knee. |
| Exclusion criteria | • Patient has a BMI > 35. • Patient’s expected physical activity after surgery is 2 or less on the UCLA Activity Scale. • Patient has had previous hip or knee replacement surgery in the last 6 months or is planned to have a (second) hip or knee replacement in the next 6-12 months (because of the effect on function). • Patient has had a previous hip replacement on the affected side (this may cause for a restriction for the rod placement during surgery). • Patient has had major, non-arthroscopic surgery to the study knee, including HTO. • Patient has an active, local infection or systemic infection. • Patient has physical, emotional, or neurological conditions that would compromise compliance with post-operative rehabilitation and follow-up. • Bone stock compromised by disease, infection, or prior implantation which cannot provide adequate support and/or fixation to the prosthesis. • Severe instability of the knee joint secondary to the absence of collateral ligament integrity and function. • Severe instability of the knee joint due to loss of cartilage reported as “substance loss.” • Patient has knee flexion < 90°. • Patient has fixed flexion deformity >10° (passive extension lag). • Patient has >30° extension deficit (active restraint to extension). • Patient does not have a proper functioning patella tendon on the affected side measured as inability of active extension of the knee. • Patient has quadriceps weakness on the affected side; score on MRC scale < 4. • Patient has rheumatoid arthritis, any auto-immune disorder, or immunosuppressive disorder. |
Fig. 1The custom-made aiming device used to standardize the distal entry points of the two rods. The device has a small cylinder which is placed in the intercondylar notch, and two holes, all interspaced at 5 mm. The anterior and posterior holes are used to mark the entry point for the standard rod and flex rod, respectively
Fig. 2The difference between the standard rod (shaded in background) and the flex rod (clear in foreground) shown in the sagittal view of the distal femur
Fig. 3The flexion angle (θ) of the prosthesis. This angle is measured in the sagittal plane between the longitudinal bone stub axis (BSA) and the frontal flange (FF). The double arrows are used for determining the orientation of the BSA. The angle γ between the neutral line of the femoral component (N) and the BSA is calculated by γ = θ − 7°
Fig. 4a Sagittal contour of the distal femur. The sagittal profile lines are oriented with between the intersection of the posterior condylar offset (PCOi) and the outer border of the native bone or femoral component (shown here). For the profile, five lines are plotted: straight anterior (ANT), anterior at 30° (ANT30), straight distal (DIST), posterior at 30° (POST30), and straight posterior (POST). b The orientation of the 3 sagittal slices of the femur where the sagittal profile is calculated: (1) the medial slice, (2) the trochlea slice, and (3) the lateral slice. All slices are oriented perpendicular to the line through the PCOi (see a)
The surgical study parameters
| Parameter | Scale or units | Scored by | Details |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sagittal thickness of the bone cuts during surgery | mm | Surgeon | The bone cuts are posterior cut of patella, anterior cut medial condyle, anterior cut trochlea, anterior cut lateral condyle, anterior 45° cut medial condyle, anterior 45° cut trochlea, anterior 45° cut lateral condyle, distal cut of medial condyle, distal cut of lateral condyle, posterior cut of medial condyle, and posterior cut of lateral condyle. Measured using a Vernier caliper. |
| Cartilage score of the bone cuts | No, partial, good | Surgeon | See above for the bone cuts |
| Area of bone cuts | mm2 | Researcher | All bone cuts are placed with the cut side facing a standardized reference sheet, photographed, and post-operative the area is measured using ImageJ |
| Cut bone not covered by implant, in mediolateral direction by medial and lateral coverage with implant | mm | Surgeon | Measured per-operative by the surgeon using a Venier caliper. This distance will be measured at the intersection of the anterior chamfer cut and the neutral of the component, at the ventral part of the indention on the component and at the intersection of the neutral of the component and the dorsal chamfer cut |
| TKA procedure time | min | n/a | Collected post-operatively from hospital information system |
| Recut or sizing problem | n/a | Surgeon | |
| Number of releases of collateral ligaments | n/a | Surgeon | |
| Size of components | n/a | n/a | Collected post-operatively from hospital information system |
| Intra-operative complications | n/a | Surgeon | |
| Tourniquet time | min | n/a | Collected post-operatively from hospital information system |
Schedule of functional outcome and radiological measurements
| Parameter | Visit | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-operative | 3 months | 12 months | 24 months | |
| Fit (flexion angle and sagittal profile) | Multi Diagnost Eleva, supine | Multi Diagnost Eleva, supine | - | - |
| Functional outcome | Time Get-up and Go test, stair climbing test, Leg Extensor Power Rig | Time Get-up and Go test, stair climbing test, Leg Extensor Power Rig | Time Get-up and Go test, stair climbing test, Leg Extensor Power Rig | Time Get-up and Go test, stair climbing test, Leg Extensor Power Rig |
| Posterior condylar offset | Lateral x-ray, standing | Lateral x-ray, standing | Lateral x-ray, standing | - |
| Patellar tendon angle | Lateral x-ray, standing, 45° flexion | Lateral x-ray, standing, 45° flexion | Lateral x-ray, standing, 45° flexion | - |
| Patellar tilt and displacement | Sky-line patella x-ray, supine | Sky-line patella x-ray, supine | Sky-line patella x-ray, supine | - |