Abstract
Introduction
Anteromedial gonarthrosis is a common well described pattern of knee osteoarthritis with cartilage wear beginning in the anteromedial quadrant of the medial tibial plateau in the presence of an intact and functioning ACL. It is well known that mechanical factors such as limb alignment and meniscal integrity affect the progression of arthritis and there is some evidence that the morphology of the tibial plateau may be a risk factor in the development of this disease. The extension facet angle is the angle of the downslope of the anterior portion of the medial tibial plateau joint surface in relation to the middle portion on a sagittal view. If this is an important factor in the development of AMG there may be potential for disease modifying intervention.
This study investigates if there is a significant difference in this angle as measured on MRI between a study cohort with early AMG (partial thickness cartilage damage and intact ACL) and a comparator control cohort of patients (no cartilage damage and ACL rupture).
Methods
3 Tesla MRI scans of 99 patients; 54 with partial thickness cartilage damage and 44 comparitors with no cartilage damage (acute ACL rupture) were assessed. The extension facet angle was measured (Osirix v3.6) using a validated technique on two consecutive MRI T2 sagittal slices orientated at the mid-coronal point of the medial femoral condyle. (InterClass Correlation 0.95, IntraClass Correlation 0.97, within subject variation of 1.1° and coefficient of variation 10.7%). The mean of the two extension angle values was used. The results were tabulated and analysed (R v2.9.1).
Results
Of the 99 knees, 38 were female and 61 male; 44 left knees and 55 right. The mean extension facet angle for the partial thickness group was 12.7° (SD 3.35) and for the comparator group 8.7° (SD 3.09). There was a significant difference between these 2 groups (Mann Whitney U, p<0.001). Although there were significantly more men than women in the comparator group, stratification analysis showed that there was no effect of gender on the mean extension facet angle. There was no effect of age on EFA in either group.
Discussion
There is a significance difference in the extension facet angle between patients with AMG with only partial thickness cartilage loss and a comparator group. This has not been shown in a study group of this size before. Since none of the subjects had full thickness cartilage loss it is unlikely that this difference is due to bone attrition changing the angle as part of the disease process but this is an important area for further study. We believe that a higher medial tibial extension facet angle alters the mechanics within the medial compartment, placing these patients at higher risk of developing AMG. This may present an opportunity for risk factor modification, for example osteotomy.