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General Orthopaedics

THE ANTERIOR FEMORAL CORTICAL LINE: A NEW LANDMARK FOR ASSESSING INTRA-OPERATIVE FEMORAL COMPONENT ROTATION IN TOTAL KNEE REPLACEMENT

British Orthopaedic Association (BOA) 2007



Abstract

The anterior femoral cortical line (AFCL) is an anatomical landmark which has been used by the senior author for 20 years to assess femoral rotation in over 4000 TKR's. The AFCL describes the alignment of the anterior cortex of the distal femur proximal to the trochlear articular cartilage.

The AFCL was compared with the surgical epicondylar (SEA), anteroposterior (Whiteside's line) and posterior condylar (PC) axes using 50 dry-bone cadaveric femora, 16 wet cadaveric specimens, 50 axial MRI's and 58 TKR patients intra-operatively.

In the dry-bone/cadaveric femora (measuring relative to the SEA the AFCL and Whiteside's AP axis were 1° externally rotated and the PC axis was 1° internally rotated. By MRI (relative to the SEA) the AFCL was 8° internally rotated, Whiteside's was 2° externally rotated and the PC axis was 3° internally rotated. In the clinical study (measuring relative to a perpendicular to Whiteside's line alone) the AFCL was 4° degrees internally rotated, which equates to 2-3° of internal rotation relative to the SEA.

The AFCL is another axis, completing the ‘compass points’ around the knee. It may prove particularly useful when one or all of the other reference axes are disturbed such as in revision TKR, lateral condylar hypoplasia or where there has been previous epicondylar trauma. We suggest building in 5° external rotation with respect to the anterior femoral cortical line for femoral component rotation.