Abstract
The purpose of this study was to assess whether China-made robot-assisted medial UKA can improve prosthesis placement accuracy and yield superior short-term outcomes compared with conventional UKA. 50 patients who underwent initial medial UKA were included in this single-center, prospective, parallel, randomized, controlled trial. Preoperatively, patients were randomly categorized the robot-assisted UKA group and conventional UKA group. The operation time, intraoperative blood loss, postoperative pain scores (VAS scores at 24h, 72h, and 3months post-surgery), KSS scores (clinical and functional scores), and knee range of motion (ROM) were compared between the two groups. The coronal deviation values of the femoral component, tibial component, and knee joint line height change were also compared between the two groups. The deviations in tibial component coronal plane alignment, femoral component coronal plane alignment, and joint line height change were significantly smaller in the robot-assisted group compared to those in the conventional group (p < 0.05). The operation time of the robot-assisted group was longer than that of the conventional group (p < 0.05). At 24h and 72h postoperatively, patients in the robot-assisted group reported lower VAS scores compared to those in the conventional group (p < 0.05). No significant differences were observed between the two groups regarding intraoperative bloodloss, the VAS scores at 3 months postoperatively, the KSS scores (clinical scores and functional scores) at 3months postoperatively, and the Knee range of motion at 3months postoperatively. The China-made UKA robot can enhance the precision of prosthesis placement, yielding favorable short-term therapeutic outcomes.
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