Abstract

BackgroundThe purpose of this study was to evaluate the relationship between the preoperative knee deformity/kinematic pattern and the postoperative knee kinematic pattern in posterior cruciate ligament substituting (PS)-total knee arthroplasty (TKA). MethodsThis study involved 39 patients with medial osteoarthritis who underwent a primary PS-TKA using a computed-tomography-based navigation system. All the operations were performed by a single surgeon using a subvastus approach, modified gap technique and the same PS type of prosthesis (Genesis II™ total knee system, Smith & Nephew, Memphis, TN, USA). Knee deformity, kinematic pattern after capsule incision (preoperative knee kinematics), and kinematic pattern after implantation (postoperative knee kinematics) in PS-TKA were measured. Kinematic patterns were divided into two groups: a medial pivot group and a non-medial pivot group. ResultsPreoperative varus knee deformity was significantly larger in the non-medial pivot group than in the medial pivot group (femorotibial angle: 184.7±6.4° vs. 180.8±3.9°, P<0.05). In addition, preoperative knee kinematics were conserved postoperatively, at a rate of 82% (P<0.01). ConclusionsThe severity of varus knee deformity and the preoperative knee kinematic pattern might have affected the postoperative knee kinematics in PS-TKA. This must be confirmed with a randomized controlled trial on a large population study. Level of evidence: case control study, Level III.

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