Abstract

Five revision total knee arthroplasties (TKAs) involving severe femoral bone loss were performed in 1994. Each had sufficiently severe femoral bone loss in which collateral ligament origins and posterior capsular attachments were violated. A paradoxical phenomenon was observed in each case. Unlike primary TKAs, in which larger distal femoral bone resection leads to laxity of the knee joint in extension, these cases with severe distal femoral bone loss, after initial component selection, developed the opposite situation, a flexion contracture. It was hypothesized that femoral bone loss involving collateral ligament origins would permit distraction of the tibia below the femur with the knee held in flexion, but when the knee was brought to full extension, intact posterior structures would maintain a normal tibial position. To investigate this hypothesis, six fresh-frozen cadaveric lower limbs were tested in full extension and 45 degrees and 90 degrees of flexion after release of the femoral attachments of the collateral ligaments and the posterior capsule from the femur. Joint space changes were measured via a motion tracking device. Results showed that with loss of collateral attachments, 17.2+/-8.9 mm of joint space is created in 90 degrees of flexion, whereas the joint space in full extension is conserved (1.5+/-1.7 mm). With additional loss of the posterior capsule, the joint space at 90 degrees of flexion increased to 26.2+/-6.1 mm, with minimal changes in the extension gap (3.4+/-0.8 mm). Distal femoral bone loss was associated with an increase in the flexion gap compared to the extension gap.

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