Abstract

BackgroundOur study aimed to investigate whether geometrical features (size, shape, or alignment parameters) of the femoral condyle affect the morphology of the trochlear groove.MethodsComputed tomography models of 195 femurs (97 and 98 knees from male and female subjects, respectively) were reconstructed into three-dimensional models and categorised into four types of trochlear groove morphology based on the position of the turning point in relation to the mechanical axis (types 45°, 60°, 75°, and 90°). Only subjects with healthy knees were included, whereas individuals with previous knee trauma or knee pain, soft tissue injury, osteoarthritis, or other chronic diseases of the musculoskeletal system were excluded. The size parameters were: radius of the best-fit cylinder, anteroposterior dimension of the lateral condyles (AP), and distal mediolateral dimension (ML). The shape parameters were: aspect ratio (AP/ML), arc angle, and proximal- and distal- end angles. The alignment parameters were: knee valgus physiologic angle (KVPA), mechanical medial distal femoral angle (mMDFA), and hip-knee-ankle angle (HKA). All variables were measured in the femoral condyle models, and the means for each groove type were compared using one-way analysis of variance.ResultsNo significant difference among groove types was observed regarding size parameters. There were significant differences when comparing type 45° with types 60°, 75°, and 90° regarding aspect ratio and distal-end angle (p < 0.05), but not regarding proximal-end angle. There were significant differences when comparing type 90° with types 45°, 60°, and 75° regarding KVPA, mMDFA, and HKA (p < 0.05).ConclusionAmong size, shape, and alignment parameters, the latter two exhibited partial influence on the morphology of the trochlear groove. Shape parameters affected the trochlear groove for trochlear type 45°, for which the femoral condyle was relatively flat, whereas alignment parameters affected the trochlear groove for trochlear type 90°, showing that knees in type 90° tend to be valgus. The morphometric analysis based on trochlear groove classification may be helpful for the future design of individualized prostheses.

Highlights

  • Our study aimed to investigate whether geometrical features of the femoral condyle affect the morphology of the trochlear groove

  • In a previous analysis of computed tomography (CT) femur models of 100 healthy Chinese subjects (200 knee models), the trochlear groove morphology was defined based on the position of the groove turning point relative to the femoral mechanical axis

  • We found that the size-related parameters did not represent factors influencing the trochlear groove morphology, implying that there are four types of groove tracking in knee of various sizes

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Summary

Introduction

Our study aimed to investigate whether geometrical features (size, shape, or alignment parameters) of the femoral condyle affect the morphology of the trochlear groove. Based on the location of the turning point in different cross sections, the trochlear groove was classified into four main types (45°, 60°, 75°, and 90°), which provided the theoretical fundamentals underlying anatomical category definitions in groove tracking [1] This approach enables the development of better designed trochlear prosthetic components, optimally suited to diverse patient populations, and further provides the reference values to be used in the clinical setting for diagnosing patellofemoral diseases such as patellar maltracking and trochlear dysplasia. It remains unclear whether there are certain geometrical features of the trochlear groove that lead to a specific type of trochlea groove morphology. No study has been conducted to investigate the anatomical factors influencing the shape of the trochlear groove tracking in the context of the morphological classification based on the position of the groove turning point relative to the femoral axis

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