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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 105 - 105
1 Jan 2016
Dai Y Penninger C Bischoff J
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INTRODUCTION

During total knee arthroplasty (TKA), the pursuit of accurate alignment, proper bone cuts, and good soft tissue balancing sometimes can result in the overhang of the femoral component, especially in smaller-sized Asian knees. As size and shape of the distal femur are highly variable, component designs that offer increased shape and size offerings may be desirable to fit the distal femur. This study tested the hypothesis that increased shape and size offerings in TKA femoral designs may improve their fit to the Japanese femur compared to designs that offer only one shape and limited sizes.

METHODS

Five contemporary femoral component designs were evaluated (Designs A-E). Design A has multiple mediolateral (ML) size offerings for a specific component anteroposterior (AP) size, and the finest increment (2mm) in AP sizes among all the designs. Designs B-E have single ML offerings across component AP sizes. For each design, virtual TKA resections were performed on the digital surfaces of 82 Japanese distal femora, each sized by selecting the component AP size that most closely matched but did not exceed the femoral AP dimension (Fig 1A,B). The aspect ratio (ML/AP) of the resected femora was regressed against the aspect ratio of their properly sized components per design. The closeness of each design to the perfect shape match was evaluated by the root-mean-square deviation (RMSD) of the deviations between the femoral bone and components. Differences in ML dimensions (overhang/underhang) between component and resected femora were calculated (Fig1C,D). The incidence of clinically significant femoral overhang (>3mm), in which component downsizing is required, were analyzed.