Abstract

BackgroundRadiographic imaging is an important tool to assess osteoarthritis (OA). Lateral compartment osteoarthritis (valgus OA) usually starts with cartilage degeneration along the posterior aspect of the lateral femoral condyle. There is evidence that the posterior-anterior (PA)-flexed view is more sensitive when diagnosing early stages of valgus OA compared to the anterior-posterior (AP) view. The current paper analyzes the value of the PA-flexed view for patients scheduled for total knee arthroplasty (TKA).MethodsRadiographs of 134 valgus knees were assessed prior to TKA. The minimal joint space width (minJSW) was measured on AP and PA-flexed views. The extent of mechanical deformity was measured on hip to ankle standing films.Results49 (36.6%) AP views showed Kellgren and Lawrence (K/L)-grade 4 osteoarthritis in the lateral compartment, 82 (63.4%) showed grade 3 or less. The PA-flexed view resulted in an increased K/L-grading to grade 4 for 53 knees (62.4%) that were considered grade 3 or less on standard AP-radiographs. There was a significant differences between lateral minJSW on AP and PA-flexed view for patients with up to 10 degrees of mechanical valgus deformity (p < 0.001), as well as 11 to 15 degrees of mechanical deformity (p = 0.021). Only knees with severe deformity of more than 15 degrees did not show a difference in minJSW between PA-flexed view and AP view (p = 0.345).ConclusionsThe PA-flexed view is superior to the standard AP view in quantifying the extent of valgus OA in patients with zero to fifteen degrees of valgus deformity. It is recommended for the initial assessment of patients with valgus osteoarthritis and better documents the extent of osteoarthritis prior to TKA.

Highlights

  • Radiographic imaging is an important tool to assess osteoarthritis (OA)

  • The weight-bearing fixed-flexion posterior anterior radiographic imaging of the knee (PA-flexed view) is a supplemental radiographic image that focuses on the cartilage loss over the posterior lateral femoral condyle and has been documented to be more sensitive for the diagnosis of early valgus OA [5]

  • The current study investigates the following research questions: Is the PA-flexed view more accurate for the (K/L) grading of valgus (OA)? Does the PAflexed view effect the minimal joint space width (minJSW) measurements regardless of the grading of (OA) and extent of mechanical deformity?

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Summary

Introduction

Radiographic imaging is an important tool to assess osteoarthritis (OA). Lateral compartment osteoarthritis (valgus OA) usually starts with cartilage degeneration along the posterior aspect of the lateral femoral condyle. Stages of valgus osteoarthritis (OA) mainly effect the posterior aspect of the lateral femoral condyle [1]. Weight-bearing anterior-to-posterior radiographs of the fully-extended knee (AP view) are the most common tool to diagnose OA of the knee. The weight-bearing fixed-flexion posterior anterior radiographic imaging of the knee (PA-flexed view) is a supplemental radiographic image that focuses on the cartilage loss over the posterior lateral femoral condyle and has been documented to be more sensitive for the diagnosis of early valgus OA [5].

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