Abstract

BackgroundRecent evidence has questioned the value of standing limb alignment for predicting the adduction moment and forces exerted on healthy and prosthetic knees. The purpose of this study was to assess the lower limb alignment of OA knee patients at various knee flexion angles.The main hypothesis was that lower limb alignment measured throughout knee flexion does not significantly differ between patients displaying different extension alignment (neutral, varus or valgus). Methods206 arthritic knee patients undergoing computer-assisted total (CAS) knee prosthesis were included. Frontal limb alignment was assessed in a systematic manner by CAS at three knee positions: extension, 90 degrees of flexion and maximal flexion. The HKA angle at each knee position and the change in HKA angle between two knee positions (delta value) were reported and compared. ResultsA large proportion of OA patients had significant variation in their lower limb alignment (32% with Δ HKA > 5°). The extended limb deformity tended to reduce with knee flexion: mean of 5° and 6° deformity reduction for varus and valgus patients, 40% and 66% of varus and valgus patients progressed to neutral alignment with 90° knee flexion. Forty percent of neutral extended lower limb did not maintain their neutral alignment but rather progressed to either varus or valgus at 90° knee flexion. ConclusionsLimb alignment in extension is a poor predictor of limb alignment in flexion in OA patients.Only considering the traditional frontal alignment of an extended lower limb for planning knee arthroplasty or osteotomy is likely insufficient.

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