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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 86-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 33 - 33
1 Jan 2004
Bercovy M Duron A Siney H Weber E Zimmerman M
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Purpose: This comparative study of femoropatellar function in four types of total knee arthroplasty (TKA) was conducted to demonstrate the relation between the form of the femoropatellar articulation and the function outcome achieved with these prostheses.

Material and methods: Forty patients who had undergone first-intention TKA for primary degenerative joint disease were selected at random. Minimum follow-up was one year. The functional IKDC score was greater than 85/100. All TKA had been inserted without preservation of the posterior cruciate ligament. Four types of prostheses were used:

- posterior stabilised prosthesis with a fixed plateau, toric trochlea, cemented dome patella (n=10);

- TKA with a rotating platform, 2-facet trochlae, rotatory congruent patella (n=10);

- TKA with a rotating platform, 2-facet trochale, without resurfacing (n=10);

- TKA with a rotating platform, hollow anatomic trochlae (n=10).

The following parameters were studied prospectively:

- pain assessed on a visual analogue scale;

- clinical assessment of going up and down stairs (normal, step-by-step, with handrail);

- kinematic assessment of active flexion extension (0°–120°) during which the position of the patella was measured in the three planes and the trajectory of the patella was noted in comparison with the healthy side and with the moment of the quadriceps;

- efficacy of the quadriceps (Cibex).

Results: The kinematic data demonstrated a significant difference between:

- TKAs with a dome patella and those with an anatomic patella;

- TKAs with an anatomic trochlae and those with a hollow trochlae;

This difference basically involved the patellar tilt, lateral subluxation of the patella, and especially, the patellar trajectory between 20° and 90°, the toric trochlae with a dome patella having a more anterior trajectory than the normal knee.

The clinical and functional study showed that:

- the percentage of totally pain-free femoropatellar articulations was higher for the hollow anatomic trochlae (96%) than for the three other types (75%) (p = 0.04);

- the stairs function was better for all the anatomic trochlae compared with the dome trochlae (p = 0.05);

- the efficacy of the quadriceps was the same for the four types of TKA.

Discussion and conclusion: This study confirms the theoretic work reported by Walker and the clinical work reported by Andriacchi on the anterior curvature of the trochlae and the kinematic work reported by Stichl on the advantage of anatomic trochlae. These findings point out the advantage of the hollow anatomic trochlae where the patella is applied on the trochlear groove situated at the same depth as the normal trochlae, which is not the case with most TKAs. This advantage is seen by the absence of pain and by the propulsion when climbing stairs.