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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_5 | Pages 35 - 35
1 Mar 2017
Mueller J Wentorf F Herbst S
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Purpose

The goal of Total Ankle Arthroplasty (TAA) is to relieve pain and restore healthy function of the intact ankle. Restoring intact ankle kinematics is an important step in restoring normal function to the joint. Previous robotic laxity testing and functional activity simulation showed the intact and implanted motion of the tibia relative to the calcaneus is similar. However there is limited data on the tibiotalar joint in either the intact or implanted state. This current study compares modern anatomically designed TAA to intact tibiotalar motion.

Method

A robotic testing system including a 6 DOF load cell (AMTI, Waltham, MA) was used to evaluate a simulated functional activity before and after implantation of a modern anatomically designed TAA (Figure 1). An experienced foot and ankle surgeon performed TAA on five fresh-frozen cadaveric specimens. The specimen tibia and fibula were potted and affixed to the robot arm (KUKA Robotics Inc., Augsburg, Germany) while the calcaneus was secured to a fixed pedestal (Figure 1). Passive reflective motion capture arrays were fixed to the tibia and talus and a portable coordinate measuring machine (Hexagon Metrology Group, Stockholm, Sweden) established the location of the markers relative to anatomical landmarks palpated on the tibia. A four camera motion capture system (The Motion Monitor, Innovative Sports Training, Chicago, IL) recorded the movement of the tibia and talus. The tibia was rotated from 30 degrees plantar flexion to 15 degrees dorsiflexion to simulate motions during the stance phase of gait. At each flexion angle the robot found the orientation which zeroed all forces and torques except compressive force, which was either 44N or 200N.