Abstract

Sensor technology was introduced to intraoperatively analyse the differential pressure between the medial and lateral compartments of the knee during primary TKA using a sensor to assess if further balancing procedures are needed to achieve a “balanced” knee. The prognostic role of epidemiological and radiological parameters was also analysed. A consecutive series of 21 patients with primary knee osteoarthritis were enrolled and programmed for TKA in our unit between 1 September 2020 and 31 March 2021. The VERASENSE Knee System (OrthoSensor Inc., Dania Beach, FL, USA) has been proposed as an instrument that quantifies the differential pressure between the compartments of the knee intraoperatively throughout the full range of motion during primary TKA, designed with a J-curve anatomical femoral design and a PS “medially congruent” polyethylene insert. Thirteen patients (61.90%) showed a “balanced” knee, and eight patients (38.10%) showed an intra-operative “unbalanced” knee and required additional procedures. A total of 13 additional balancing procedures were performed. At the end of surgical knee procedures, a quantitatively balanced knee was obtained in all patients. In addition, a correlation was found between the compartment pressure of phase I and phase II at 10° of flexion and higher absolute pressures were found in the medial compartment than in the lateral compartment in each ROM degree investigated. Moreover, those pressure values showed a trend to decrease with the increase in flexion degrees in both compartments. The “Kinetic Tracking” function displays the knee’s dynamic motion through the full ROM to evaluate joint kinetics. The obtained kinetic traces reproduced the knee’s medial pivot and femoral rollback, mimicking natural knee biomechanics. Moreover, we reported a statistically significant correlation between the need for soft tissue or bone resection rebalancing and severity of the initial coronal deformity (>10°) and a preoperative JLCA value >2°. The use of quantitative sensor-guided pressure evaluation during TKA leads to a more reproducible “balanced” knee. The surgeon, evaluating radiological parameters before surgery, may anticipate difficulties in knee balance and require those devices to achieve the desired result objectively.

Highlights

  • Over the past decade, total knee arthroplasty (TKA) rates are rising due to the increased life expectancy of the population and the number of osteoarthritis cases found

  • This study aims to quantify the differential pressure between the medial and lateral compartments of the knee throughout the full range of motion during primary Anatomic Bi-cruciate Stabilized (BCS) TKA using a kinetic sensor

  • This study objectively evaluated compartment pressures of the joint throughout the ROM in TKA designed with a J-curve anatomical femoral design and a posterior stabilized (PS) “medially congruent” polyethylene insert using an instrumented tibial trail

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Summary

Introduction

Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) rates are rising due to the increased life expectancy of the population and the number of osteoarthritis cases found. Revision total knee arthroplasty (r-TKA) due to instability, related to inappropriate soft tissue balancing, has been estimated in more than 20% each year [3] For this reason, surgeons may tend to increase the intra-articular level of constraint to improve implant stability, resulting in less range of motion, premature wear and reduced total implant survival [4,5,6]. Several authors [14,15], based on intraoperative observations of experienced surgeons and biomechanical studies [14,15,16], defined knees as adequately “balanced” when the pressure difference between the compartments was less than 15 pound-force (lbf) throughout the entire range of motion The authors define this digital sensor system as an excellent method to obtain ideal stability during primary total knee arthroplasty. The role of epidemiological and radiological parameters was analysed to assess if they might be prognostic factors to define the need to use a sensor to improve TKA balancing

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