Abstract
Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) has produced excellent results, but many surgeons are hesitant to perform TKA in younger patients with isolated patellofemoral arthritis. In properly selected patients, patellofemoral arthroplasty (PFA) is an effective procedure with good long-term results. Contemporary PFA prostheses have eliminated many of the patellar maltracking problems associated with older designs, and short-term results, as described here, are encouraging. Long-term outcome and prospective trials comparing TKA to PFA are needed.
Incidence
Isolated patellofemoral arthritis occurs in as many as 11% of men and 24% of women older than age 55 years with symptomatic osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee; Isolated patellofemoral arthritis found in 9.2% of patients older than age 40 years; 7% to 19% of patients experience residual anterior knee pain when TKA is done for isolated patellofemoral arthritis
Imaging
Weight bearing AP radiographs as supine radiographs can underestimate the extent of tibiofemoral arthritis; Midflexion posteroanterior radiographs to rule out posterior condylar wear; Lateral radiographs to identify the presence or absence of patella alta or baja; Axial radiographs identify the presence of trochlear dysplasia, patellar tilt or subluxation, and extent of patellofemoral arthritis; Magnetic resonance imaging and arthroscopic photographs should be reviewed if available
Indications
Osteoarthritis limited to the patellofemoral joint; Symptoms affecting daily activity referable to patellofemoral joint degeneration unresponsive to lengthy nonoperative treatment; Posttraumatic osteoarthritis; Extensive Grade-III chondrosis; Failed extensor unloading surgical procedure; Patellofemoral malalignment/dysplasia-induced degeneration
Contraindications
No attempt at nonoperative care or to rule out other sources of pain; Arthritis of greater than Grade 1 involving tibiofemoral articulation; Systemic inflammatory arthropathy; Osteoarthritis/chondrosis of the patellofemoral joint of Grade 3 or less; Patella baja; Uncorrected patellofemoral instability or malalignment; Uncorrected tibiofemoral mechanical malalignment; Active infection; Evidence of chronic regional pain syndrome or evidence of psychogenic pain; Fixed loss of knee range of motion, minimum 10–110 degrees ROM
Results
Majority of failures related to patellar instability from uncorrected patellar malalignment, soft-tissue imbalance, or component malposition; With improved implant designs tibiofemoral arthritis has become the primary source of failure; Failure from component subsidence or loosening occurring in <1% of knees
Our Series
Retrospective review 34 patients, 40 knees average 30 month follow-up using Natural Knee II Patello-femoral Joint System (Zimmer, Warsaw, IN); Average age 61, ranging from 34–84 years of age; Average subset KOOS scores were 93 for pain, 94 for symptoms, 94 for ADL's, 70 for sports and recreation, 82 for quality of life; Average pre-operative Tegner score 2.6, increasing to 4.7 post-operatively; 38/40 survival over 30 months with the two failures undergoing revision for traumatic injuries; No revisions to TKA; At most recent follow-up no progression of OA to involve tibiofemoral compartments; No evidence of component loosening.