Abstract

A total knee has been designed to mimic less-compliant medial and more-compliant lateral behavior. In vivo testing compared open-kinematic chain behaviors of cadaver knees in their normal state and after implantation of the knee prosthesis. Specimen's limbs were computed tomography scanned, and infrared arrays on tibia and femur were registered to bone markers. Motion of the joint and quadriceps force were reported from 90° flexion to full extension. Less medial and more lateral anterior-posterior motion was seen in both the intact and the implanted knees. Tibiofemoral rotation and translation were similar in direction but were reduced in magnitude for the prosthetic knees. Quadriceps force, defined as that applied force required to extend the knee, required after implantation was variable between specimens but not statistically different from the intact condition. The prosthesis tested exhibits kinematic behavior similar to that in their normal state, with no difference in quadriceps force required for extension.

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