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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_14 | Pages 44 - 44
1 Mar 2013
Porteous A Murray J Robinson J Hassaballa M
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Aim. To assess the survivorship of unicompartmental replacements (UKR) revised to UKR. Background: Partial revision of UKR, or revision to a further UKR is a rarely performed procedure with some data from the Australian registry suggesting that results are not good, with early revision being required. Method. All revision procedures from initial UKR are prospectively followed and scored as part of our department's knee database. We analysed the 37 cases in our database that showed revision of UKR to UKR. These included cases in the following categories: a) Mobile bearing revised to mobile bearing (n=8) b) Mobile bearing revised to fixed bearing (n=20) c) Fixed bearing revised to fixed bearing (n=9). Results. The survivorship of revisions of mobile UKR to mobile UKR was 87.5% at a mean of 5 yrs. The survivorship of revisions from mobile UKR to fixed bearing UKR was 95% at a mean of 8 yrs. The survivorship of revisions from fixed bearing UKR to fixed bearing UKR was 78% at 15 yr (1 revised at 9yrs, 1 at 12 yrs). Conclusion. Despite the perception that revision of a UKR to another UKR is likely to fail and require early revision, our results suggest that in specific circumstances acceptable survivorship and outcome are possible. MULTIPLE DISCLOSURES


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XVII | Pages 6 - 6
1 May 2012
Lewis J Arasin S Padgett J Davies A
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Patellofemoral unicompartmental joint replacement is a controversial subject with a relatively small evidence base. Of the 50,000 total knee arthroplasties performed each year in the UK, approximately 10% are performed for predominantly patellofemoral arthritis. There are several patellofemoral unicompartmental prostheses on the market with the National Joint Registry recording 745 such prostheses used in 2007. Most evidence in favour of this procedure comes from experience with the Avon prosthesis (Stryker) predominantly from designer-surgeons. The FPV patellofemoral joint replacement (Wright Medical) has been in use in Europe for several years. The instruments have recently been redesigned and the device marketed in the UK. In 2007 the FPV had 5.9% market share (n=44). We present our early experience with the FPV patellofemoral joint replacement, which to our knowledge, is the first clinical outcome series for this prosthesis. 33 consecutive FPV joint replacements in 29 patients were performed between April 2007 and September 2009 for unicompartmental patellofemoral OA. All cases were performed or directly supervised by the senior author. Results are presented with a minimum follow-up of six months. Oxford and American Knee Society scores (AKSS) were obtained on all patients preoperatively and at subsequent outpatient visits. Mean preoperative AKSS knee score was 49.7 points and postoperative scores at 6 months and 1 year were 82.5 and 86.4 respectively. Mean Oxford score preoperatively was 30.4 (37%) and at 6 months and 1 year were 21.3 (56%) and 11.2 (77%) respectively. There were no complications related to the implant. One knee required a secondary open lateral release due to inadequate balancing at the index procedure. Further medium to long-term follow up data are required, but our initial experience with this device is encouraging


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XLIV | Pages 10 - 10
1 Oct 2012
Mofidi A Lu B Goddard M Conditt M Poehling G Jinnah R
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The knee is one of the most commonly affected joints in osteoarthritis. Unicompartmental knee replacement (UKA) was developed to address patients with this disease in only one compartment. The conventional knee arthroplasty jigs, while usually being accurate, may result in the prosthesis being inserted in an undesired alignment which may lead to poor post-operative outcomes. Common modes of failure in UKA include edge loading due to incorrect sizing or positioning, development of disease in the other compartment due to over-stuffing or over-correction and early loosening or stress fractures due to inaccurate bone cuts.

Computer navigation and robotically assisted unicompartmental knee replacement were introduced in order to improve the surgical accuracy of both the femoral and tibial bone cuts. The aim of this study was to assess accuracy and reliability of robotic assisted, unicondylar knee surgery in producing reported bony alignment.

Two hundred and twenty consecutive patients with a mean age of 64 + 11 years who underwent successful medial robotic assisted unicondylar knee surgery performed by two senior total joint arthroplasty surgeons were identified retrospectively. The mean body mass index of the cohort was 33.5 + 8 kg/m2 with a minimum follow-up of 6 months (range: 6–18 months). Femoral and tibial sagittal and coronal alignments as well as the posterior slope of the tibial component were measured in the post-operative radiographs. These measurements were compared with the equivalent measurements collected during intra-operative period by the navigation to study the reliability and accuracy of femoral and tibial cuts. Radiographic evaluation was independently conducted by two observers.

There was an average difference of 2.2 to 3.6 degrees between the intra-operatively planned and post-operative radiological equivalent measurements. For the femur, mean varus/valgus angulation was 2.8 + 2.5 degrees with 83% of those measured within 5% of planned. For the tibia mean varus/valgus angulation was 2.4 + 1.9 degrees with 93% within 5% of planned resection. There was minimal inter-observer variability between radiographic measurements. There were no infections in the evaluated group at the time of radiographic examination.

Alignment for unicondylar knee arthroplasty is important for implant survival and is a more difficult procedure to instrument as it is a minimally invasive surgery. Assuming appropriate planning, robotically assisted surgery in unicondylar knee replacement will result in reliably accurate positioning of component and reduce early component failures caused by malpositioning. A mismatch between pre-planning and post-operative radiography is often caused by poor cementing technique of the prosthesis rather than incorrect bony cuts. Addressing these factors can lead to greater success and improved outcomes for patients.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 56 - 56
1 Mar 2013
Netter J Hermida J Kester M D'Alessio J Steklov N Flores-Hernandez C Colwell C Lima DD
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INTRODUCTION

Wear and polyethylene damage have been implicated in up to 22% of revision surgeries after unicompartmental knee replacement. Two major design rationales to reduce this rate involve either geometry and/or material strategies. Geometric options involve highly congruent mobile bearings with large contact areas; or moderately conforming fixed bearings to prevent bearing dislocation and reduce back-side wear, while material changes involve use of highly crosslinked polyethylene. This study was designed to determine if a highly crosslinked fixed-bearing design would increase wear resistance.

METHODS

Gravimetric wear rates were measured for two unicompartmental implant designs: Oxford unicompartmental (Biomet) and Triathlon X3 PKR (Stryker) on a knee wear simulator (AMTI) using the ISO-recommended standard. The Oxford design had a highly conforming mobile bearing of compression molded Polyethylene (Arcom). The Triathlon PKR had a moderately conforming fixed bearing of sequentially crosslinked Polyethylene (X3).

A finite element model of the AMTI wear simulation was constructed to replicate experimental conditions and to compute wear. This approach was validated using experimental results from previous studies.

The wear coefficient obtained previously for radiation-sterilized low crosslinked polyethylene was used to predict wear in Oxford components. The wear coefficient obtained for highly crosslinked polyethylene was used to predict wear in Triathlon X3 PKR components. To study the effect design and polyethylene crosslinking, wear rates were computed for each design using both wear coefficients.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_20 | Pages 22 - 22
1 Apr 2013
Jariwala A Ingale P Johnston L Hadden W
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Introduction

Recent studies have indicated that healthy and willing patients above 80 years have similar outcomes as younger patients following arthroplasty. We wished to investigate the outcomes in a cohort of patients above 80 years who underwent medial unicompartment knee replacement (UKA).

Material/methods

46 patients (51 knees) with UKA aged 80 or more formed the study group. For comparison rest of the UKA patients in the database were divided into groups according to their age. Patients were reviewed and KSS, complication rates and patient satisfaction information was collected. Revision for any cause was considered an endpoint. Significance was set at < 0.05.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXV | Pages 219 - 219
1 Jun 2012
Sinha R Cutler M
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INTRODUCTION

we have previously reported that bone preparation is quite precise and accurate relative to a preoperative plan when using a robotic arm assisted technique for UKA. However, in that same study, we found a large variation between intended and final tibial implant position, presumably occuring during cement curing. In this study, we reviewed a subsequent cohort of patients in which the tibial and femoral components were cemented individually with ongoing evaluation of tibial component position during cement curing.

METHODS AND MATERIALS

Group 1 comprised the simultaneous cementing techniquegroup of patients, previously reported on, although their x-rays were re-analyzed. Group 2 consisted of the individual cementing technique cohort. All implants were identical, specifically a flat, inlay all-polyethylene tibial component. Postoperative x-rays from each cohort of patients were evaluated using image analysis software. Statistical evaluation was performed.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 4 - 4
1 Feb 2012
Cottam H Jackson M Butler-Manuel A Apthorp H
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Aims

To compare a randomised group of patients undergoing UKA to investigate the advantages of the minimal invasive approach in the early post-operative stage.

Results

100 patients on the waiting list for UKA were recruited into the trial. Patients were prospectively randomised into 2 groups: Group 1 – longitudinal skin incision with dislocation of the patella, Group 2 – the minimally invasive approach. Standard milestones were recorded post-operatively: time to achieve IRQ, independent stair climbing and to discharge. Additionally, patients were scored with the AKSS and Oxford knee questionnaire pre-operatively, at 6 weeks, 6 months and 1 year. No significant differences were found between the 2 groups in the measured parameters.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXV | Pages 84 - 84
1 Jun 2012
Haider H Weisenburger J Sherman S Karnes J
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Unicompartmental knee replacement components have gained favor because they replace only the most damaged areas of articular cartilage and the less invasive operation results in a faster patient recovery than traditional TKR. Additionally, they can provide a solution when a full TKR is not yet needed. However, the wear magnitude of such implants is not well understood, primarily due the variation in design and the difficulty of testing them in knee simulators designed to test full TKRs. Modern innovative partial cartilage replacement knee components which are typically even smaller and more bone conservative than unicompartmental implants, are even less common in testing with added challenges. This study investigates the fatigue characteristics of partial cartilage replacement knee components, and the wear of the UHMWPE bearing of a new, truly less invasive unicompartmental design by Arthrex Inc./Florida. Fatigue testing was performed on MTS 858 MiniBionix machines. Two 12mm diameter UHMWPE tibial components were cemented into jigs at 0° posterior slope and were axially loaded at 2Hz for 10 million cycles (Mc) with a sinusoidal profile peaking at 60% of 8 average human bodyweights (3800N) and a load ratio R of 0.1. Two femoral components were tested with the same load profile at 10Hz for 10 million loading cycles (Mc). The femoral components were mounted at 15° flexion and only the anterior half of the implant was supported, replicating a worst-case scenario where fixation had failed on the posterior half of the implant. This resulted in a large bending moment when force was applied that would fatigue the femoral implant. Following the fatigue test, two full wear simulation tests were conducted on four 12mm and four 20mm unicompartmental components on a four-station Instron-Stanmore force-control knee simulator. The spring-based system to simulate soft-tissue restraining forces and torques was adapted to operate the machine in a displacement control mode to achieve the motions of the medial compartment based on ISO 14243-3. The specimens were lubricated with bovine serum (20g/L protein, 37°C) and the simulator was operated at 1Hz. Liquid absorption was corrected through passive-soak-control bearing inserts. The tibial specimens were cleaned and weighed at standard intervals with the usual ISO test protocols. After 10Mc of fatigue testing, both tibial components had deformed by some flattening out but were able to sustain the full load without failure and displayed average stiffness (over the whole 10Mc) of 27,600±1,180 N/mm. Neither partially supported femoral component failed, and the femorals displayed average stiffness (over 10Mc) of 37,500 ±3,280N/mm. After 5Mc of wear testing, the 12mm tibial components displayed a wear rate of 4.56±1.45mg/Mc while the larger 20mm size wore at a lower 2.80±0.39mg/Mc. The results from the fatigue test suggest that this unicompartmental cartilage replacement design will not fail under simple axial loading, even under the extreme case where the tibial implant is receiving the entire share of the load, and the femoral component is only partially supported. In the clinical application, of course some load-sharing with the native unworn cartilage would occur, reducing the stresses on the implant. The results from the wear test showed very low wear for tibial components of this design, lower than many successful TKRs. The larger size tibial components wore less likely due to reduced contact stress. Based on the results of this test, an implant of this type could be a viable option prior to TKR


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXV | Pages 148 - 148
1 Jun 2012
Mofidi A Badaja S Holt M Davies A
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The aim of this study was to assess the increase in the anterior diameter of the knee and the impact of this increase on the range of motion and function of the knee.

Twenty-eight patients (34 knees) who underwent Patello-femoral replacement with FPV (Wright Medical) prosthesis between 2005 and 2009 who were identified retrospectively and analyzed using chart and radiological review. Oxford and AKSS knee-scores were gathered prospectively pre-operative and at follow-up.

Trochlear height was measured using lateral radiograph. Trochlear height was compared pre and postoperatively. Patellar height was also measured in preoperative and postoperative skyline view and was compared. The range of movement at six weeks and the Oxford and American knee society knee scores at six months postoperatively were noted. Association between increased anterior height and improved range of motion was studied.

All but three-knees regained full knee extension. Postoperative mean range of flexion of the knee joint was 116 degrees. The mean Oxford knee and the mean American Knee Society Knee Scores significantly improved post-operatively

The trochlear height was increased by 4mms. Patellar height was also increased by 3 mms resulting in average total increase of 7 mms in the anterior-posterior diameter of the knee. We found no relationship between range of motion of the knee and the increase in the anterior-posterior diameter. We found a negative correlation between increase in the antero-posterior and preoperative trochlear and patellar height.

We conclude that FPV Patello-femoral replacement results in correct anatomical reconstruction of the trochlear height rather than ‘overstuffing’ of the patellofemoral joint which can lead to stiffness and failure of resolution of pain post-operatively. This should in turn result in durable improvements in pain and function.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXI | Pages 117 - 117
1 May 2012
R. T T. H C. F A. R
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Purpose

To identify the incidence and reasons for revision of the Oxford prosthesis (OXF) in New Zealand.

Methods

Review and compare UKA and TKA data including patient-generated Oxford scores after operation.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 68 - 68
1 Apr 2017
Callaghan J
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Total knee arthroplasty has been demonstrated to provide durable results with excellent pain relief and improvement in function. Our institution has studied and published the longest follow-up of mobile bearing TKR, fixed bearing modular TKR, and unicompartmental replacement. Indeed these studies support the durability of the operation and the improvement in function and relief of pain. They, however, are not perfect. In tricompartmental replacement, up to 5 or 6% are revised for loosening and or wear and in unicompartmental replacement, up to 25% are revised for loosening. There are also one or two percent of cases revised for periprosthetic fracture and one or two percent for hematogenous infection. One must remember these cases were performed in patients of average age 71. When one looks at our results in more active patients with osteoarthritis who are less than 55, the results are less spectacular with 15% revised at 10 to 15 years for loosening. We all hope that better polyethylene and better tibial tray locking mechanisms (in fixed bearing modular designs) will improve these results, but to predict there will be no failures is a “leap of faith”. Long-term follow-up of cemented TKA in patients under 55 where monolithic tibial trays were utilised have demonstrated better results at 20 years (92.3%) survivorship versus those where modular tibial trays (68%) were utilised. Long-term studies of cementless total knee replacement, especially in younger patients are needed to see if this approach provides better results


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_15 | Pages 42 - 42
1 Aug 2017
Gustke K
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Robotic arm-assisted total knee replacement is performed as a semi-active system in which haptic guidance is used to precisely position and align components. This is based on pre-operative planning based on CT imaging and can be modified as needed throughout the procedure. This technology, as shown with unicompartmental arthroplasty, is more accurate than conventional and even computer navigated instrumentation and will decrease variability. The knee can be planned to a neutral mechanical alignment. Intra-operatively, the computer will demonstrate compartment gap measurements to assist with soft tissue balancing. Alternatively, limb and component alignment can be accurately adjusted several degrees off the neutral axis to balance the knee and avoid or minimise soft tissue releases. This allows a more constitutional alignment within the alignment parameters accepted by the surgeon. This technique was utilised commonly in the first 60 robotic total knee replacements performed. We will now have the ability to collect accurate component positioning, alignment, and soft tissue balance data that can be correlated to outcomes of total knee replacements


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 97 - 97
1 Jun 2018
Haas S
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Total knee arthroplasty is a successful procedure with good long-term results. Studies indicate that 15% – 25% of patients are dissatisfied with their total knee arthroplasty. In addition, return to sports activities is significantly lower than total hip arthroplasty with 34% – 42% of patients reporting decreased sports participation after their total knee arthroplasties. Poor outcomes and failures are often associated with technical errors. These include malalignment and poor ligament balancing. Malalignment has been reported in up to 25% of all revision knee arthroplasties, and instability is responsible for over 20% of failures. Most studies show that proper alignment within 3 degrees is obtained in only 70% – 80% of cases. Navigation has been shown in many studies to improve alignment. In 2015, Graves examined the Australian Joint Registry and found that computer navigated total knee arthroplasty was associated with a reduced revision rate in patients under 65 years of age. Navigation can improve alignment, but does not provide additional benefits of ligament balance. Robotic-assisted surgery can assist in many of the variables that influence outcomes of total knee arthroplasty including: implant positioning, soft tissue balance, lower limb alignment, proper sizing. The data on robotic-assisted unicompartmental arthroplasty is quite promising. Cytech showed that femoral and tibial alignment were both significantly more accurate than manual techniques with three times as many errors with the manually aligned patients. Pearle, et al. compared the cumulative revision rate at two years and showed this rate was significantly lower than data reported in most unicompartmental series, and lower revision rates than both Swedish and Australian registries. He also showed improved satisfaction scores at two years. Pagnano has noted that optimal alignment may require some deviation from mechanically neutral alignment and individualization may be preferred. This is also likely to be a requirement of more customised or bi-cruciate retaining implant designs. The precision of robotic surgery may be necessary to obtain this individualised component alignment. While robotic total knee arthroplasty requires further data to prove its value, more precise alignment and ligament balancing is likely to lead to improved outcomes, as Pearl, et al. and the Australian registry have shown. While it is difficult to predict the future at this time, I believe robotic-assisted total knee arthroplasty is the future and that future begins now


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 100-B, Issue SUPP_10 | Pages 79 - 79
1 Jun 2018
Mullaji A
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Since 2005, the author has performed nearly 1000 Oxford medial unicompartmental arthroplasties (UKA) using a mobile bearing. The indications are 1) Isolated medial compartment osteoarthritis with ‘bone-on-bone’ contact, which has failed prior conservative treatment, 2) Medial femoral condyle avascular necrosis or spontaneous osteonecrosis, which has failed prior conservative treatment. Patients are recommended for UKA only if the following anatomic requirements are met: 1) Intact ACL, 2) Full thickness articular cartilage wear limited to the anterior half of the medial tibial plateau, 3) Unaffected lateral compartment cartilage, 4) Unaffected patellar cartilage on the lateral facet, 5) Less than 10 degrees of flexion deformity, 6) Over 100 degrees of knee flexion, and 7) Varus deformity not exceeding 15 degrees. Exclusion criteria for surgery are BMI of more than 30, prior high tibial osteotomy, and inflammatory arthritis. All cases were performed with a tourniquet inflated using a minimally-invasive incision with a quadriceps-sparing approach. Both femoral and tibial components were cemented. Most patients were discharged home the next morning; bilaterals usually stayed a day longer. We have previously described our results and the factors determining alignment. In a more recent study, we have compared the coronal post-operative limb alignment and knee joint line obliquity after medial UKA with a clinically and radiologically (less than Grade 2 medial OA) normal contralateral lower limb. In our series, we have had 1 revision for aseptic loosening of both components, conversion to TKRs in a patient with bilateral UKAs who developed rheumatoid arthritis 3 years later, and 9 meniscal dislocations. There have been no cases of wound infections and thromboembolism. We have reviewed our patients with a minimum 10-year follow-up which will be presented. The vast majority of our patients have been generally very satisfied with the results. Our study shows that most patients (who have no disease in the contralateral knee) regain their ‘natural’ alignment and joint line obliquity comparable to their contralateral limb. Over the past few years our percentage of UKAs has been steadily rising to about a third of our knee cases. UKA serves as a definitive procedure in the elderly. We see it as a suitable procedure in middle-aged patients who want an operation that provides a quick recovery, full function and range of motion, and near-normal kinematics, with the understanding that they have a small chance of conversion to a total knee arthroplasty in the future


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 99-B, Issue SUPP_7 | Pages 97 - 97
1 Apr 2017
Callaghan J
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The United States is in the midst of an opioid epidemic, with the World Health Organization reporting that American's consume 99% of the world's supply of hydrocodone and 83% of the world's oxycodone. Additionally, pre-operative opioid use has been associated with worse clinical outcomes and higher rates of complications following TKA. This is especially important in the TKA population given that approximately 15% of patients are either dissatisfied or very dissatisfied at least one year after their TKA procedure. Given the concerning rise is opioid use the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) has recently released an information statement with practice recommendations for combating this excessive and inappropriate opiate use. However, little is known regarding peri-operative opioid use for TKA patients. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to: 1) identify rates of opioid use prior to primary TKA, 2) evaluate post-operative trends in opioid use throughout the year following TKA and 3) identify risk factors for prolonged opioid use following TKA. Overall, 31% of TKA patients are prescribed opioids within 3-months prior to TKA; this percentage has increased over 9% during the years included in this study. Pre-operative opioid use was most predictive of increased refills of opioids following TKA, however, other intrinsic patient characteristics were also predictive of prolonged opioid use. These characteristics remained predictive after controlling for opioid user status. The increasing rates of opioid prescribing prior to TKA are concerning, especially given literature concluding opioids have minimal effect on pain or function in patients with osteoarthritis and pre-operative opioid use is associated with poor outcomes and more complications following TKA. This data provides an important baseline for opioid use trends following TKA that can be used for future comparison and identifies risk factors for prolonged use that will be helpful to prescribers as the AAOS works to decreased opioid use, misuse and abuse within the United States. Our data on THA and unicompartmental arthroplasty is similar with an increase in pre-THA use of 9% with 38% receiving narcotics within 3 months of surgery and continued use in opioid users (9 times non-opioid users at 12 months)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 97-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 77 - 77
1 Feb 2015
Scott R
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Lateral unicompartmental replacement is performed less frequently than medial replacement and is technically more difficult. The ratio of medial to lateral arthroplasties is approximately 10:1. Differences in technique include the following:. The patella is more vulnerable to impingement on the leading edge of the femoral component and must be carefully recessed. Because the wear pattern in lateral disease is more posterior than in medial disease, there is often residual cartilage on the distal femoral condyle. This is also the case when UKA is performed for the sequella of a lateral plateau fracture. To avoid this impingement, residual cartilage should probably be removed from the distal condyle before its resection and the femoral component should be under-sized anteriorly. Initial tibial resection should be very conservative to avoid the need for very thick tibial components to restore alignment and stability. Err toward shifting the femoral component laterally and the tibial component medially to maximise M-L congruency. Consider a medial parapatellar approach (avoiding the anterior horn of the medial meniscus) to facilitate visibility and component alignment


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 97-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 79 - 79
1 Feb 2015
Thornhill T
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It is important to remember that osteoarthritis is a noninflammatory condition that can affect 1, 2 or all 3 compartments of the knee. Moreover, this disease is a continuum from very mild to very severe involvement of the soft tissue, articular cartilage and bone. For this reason, a variety of nonsurgical and surgical options are indicated. The rheumatologist and/or orthopedist must understand the stage of the disease and fit that both to the pathology, age, activity level, and functional needs of the patient. For that reason, each of the options discussed today have an indication. The important issue about tricompartmental replacement is that we have improved technology and technique and the indications of today are broader than those of 20 years ago. Hopefully, they will continue to evolve both in terms of materials and instruments. The American Rheumatologic Association (ARA) has stated that joint replacement has been the major improvement in the care of the arthritic patient. The tricompartmental solution is the treatment of choice in patients with inflammatory arthritis such as rheumatoid arthritis as well as the solution in osteoarthritic patients with tricompartmental disease. There is an indication for osteotomy, unicompartmental replacement and perhaps patellofemoral replacement. I think the next frontier will be to find disease modifying osteoarthritic drugs (DMOADS) that will provide disease intervention as the DMARDs have done in rheumatoid arthritis. Moreover, cartilage repair combined with osteotomy will hopefully allow us to prevent progression of this disease


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_22 | Pages 71 - 71
1 Dec 2016
Mullaji A
Full Access

Since 2005, the author has performed 422 Oxford medial unicompartmental arthroplasties (UKA) using a mobile bearing. There were 263 females and 119 males, (40 patients had bilateral UKAs) with a mean age of 62 years. The indications were: Isolated medial compartment osteoarthritis with ‘bone-on-bone’ contact, which had failed prior conservative treatment; Medial femoral condyle avascular necrosis or spontaneous osteonecrosis, which had failed prior conservative treatment. Patients were recommended UKA only if the following anatomic requirements were met: Intact ACL, Full thickness articular cartilage wear limited to the anterior half of the medial tibial plateau, Unaffected lateral compartment cartilage, Unaffected patellar cartilage on the lateral facet, Less than 10 degrees of flexion deformity, Over 100 degrees of knee flexion, Varus deformity not exceeding 15 degrees. Exclusion criteria for surgery were BMI of more than 30, prior high tibial osteotomy, and inflammatory arthritis. All cases were performed with a tourniquet inflated using a minimally-invasive incision with a quadriceps-sparing approach. Both femoral and tibial components were cemented. Rehabilitation consisted of teaching the patients 6 exercises to regain strength and range of motion, and weight-bearing as tolerated with a cane began from the evening of surgery. Most patients were discharged home the next morning; bilaterals usually stayed a day longer. We have previously described our results and the factors determining alignment. In a more recent study we have compared the coronal postoperative limb alignment and knee joint line obliquity after medial UKA with a clinically and radiologically (less than Grade 2 medial OA) normal contralateral lower limb. In our series of 423 cases, we have had 1 revision for aseptic loosening of both components, and 4 meniscal dislocations. There have been no cases of wound infections and thromboembolism. We are currently undertaking a review of the 2–10 year follow-up of our cases. The vast majority of our patients have been generally very satisfied with the results. Our study shows that most patients (who have no disease in the contralateral knee) regain their ‘natural’ alignment and joint line obliquity comparable to their contralateral limb. Over the past few years our percentage of UKAs has been steadily rising. UKA serves as a definitive procedure in the elderly. We see it as a suitable procedure in middle-aged patients who want an operation that provides a quick recovery, full function and range of motion, and near-normal kinematics, with the understanding that they have a small chance of conversion to a total knee arthroplasty in the future


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 102 - 102
1 Jan 2016
D'Lima D Netter J D'Alessio J Kester M Colwell C
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Background. Wear and fatigue damage to polyethylene components remain major factors leading to complications after total knee and unicompartmental arthroplasty. A number of wear simulations have been reported using mechanical test equipment as well as computer models. Computational models of knee wear have generally not replicated experimental wear under diverse conditions. This is partly because of the complexity of quantifying the effect of cross-shear at the articular interface and partly because the results of pin-on-disk experiments cannot be extrapolated to total knee arthroplasty wear. Our premise is that diverse experimental knee wear simulation studies are needed to generate validated computational models. We combined five experimental wear simulation studies to develop and validate a finite-element model that accurately predicted polyethylene wear in high and low crosslinked polyethylene, mobile and fixed bearing, and unicompartmental (UKA) and tricompartmental knee arthroplasty (TKA). Methods. Low crosslinked polyethylene (PE). A finite element analysis (FEA) of two different experimental wear simulations involving TKA components of low crosslinked polyethylene inserts, with two different loading patterns and knee kinematics conducted in an AMTI knee wear simulator: a low intensity and a high intensity. Wear coefficients incorporating contact pressure, sliding distance, and cross-shear were generated by inverse FEA using the experimentally measured volume of wear loss as the target outcome measure. The FE models and wear coefficients were validated by predicting wear in a mobile bearing UKA design. Highly crosslinked polyethylene (XLPE). Two FEA models were constructed involving TKA and UKA XLPE inserts with different loading patterns and knee kinematics conducted in an AMTI knee wear simulator. Wear coefficients were generated by inverse FEA. Results. Predicted wear rates were within 5% of experimental wear rates during validation tests. Unicompartmental mobile bearing back-side wear accounted for 46% of the total wear in the mobile bearing. Wear during the swing phase was 38% to 44% of total wear. Discussion & Conclusions. Crosslinking polyethylene primarily decreased (by nearly 10-fold) the wear generated by cross-shear. This result can be explained by the reduced propensity of crosslinked polyethylene molecules to orient in the dominant direction of sliding. A highly crosslinked fixed-bearing polyethylene insert can provide high wear performance without the increased risk for mobile bearing dislocation. Finite element analysis can be a robust and efficient method for predicting experimental wear. The value of this model is in rapidly conducting screening studies for design development, assessing the effect of varying patient activity, and assessing newer biomaterials. This FEA model was experimentally validated but requires clinical validation


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_22 | Pages 113 - 113
1 Dec 2016
Vince K
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No, Neutral mechanical axis has never been regarded as “necessary” to the success of TKA. In fact it has never been established as “ideal” with published data. Tibial femoral alignment after TKA is important, but it is also an issue that we do not understand completely. Neutral mechanical alignment refers to the relationship between the mechanical axes of the femur and tibia as shown on full length radiographs. “Neutral” means that these axes are collinear, i.e. that a line may be drawn from the center of the hip to the center of the ankle and it will intersect the center of the knee joint. The allure of the “straight line” has led many surgeons to regard a neutral mechanical axis as “perfection” for TKA surgery, but indeed, it is not the usual “normal” alignment for most human knees, nor is it the target for many conventional knee replacements. The “neutral mechanical axis” represents OVERCORRECTION for most knees. Moreland demonstrated in 1987 that few human knee joints are naturally aligned “in neutral”, but with the line from center of hip to center of ankle passing through the medial compartment. This tendency to relative varus mechanical axis in most human knees was corroborated by Bellemans et al in 2012. They substituted the word “constitutional varus” for what would otherwise be known as “normal alignment”. In general, patients with pathologic or significant varus alignment, whose arthroplasties have been performed competently, are at greatest risk for failure by wear, osteolysis and loosening. This is the prototypical failure mechanism that pre-occupied the surgeons responsible for making knee arthroplasty successful in the 1970s. The first paper to identify varus TKA alignment and failure due to loosening was Lotke and Ecker in 1977. They worked from short radiographs and ushered in an era of careful attention to valgus TKA alignment-not neutral alignment. Correction of varus deformity combined with ligament balancing was probably responsible for making condylar type knee arthroplasties work durably in the early days. Full length radiographs, used by Kennedy and White in 1987 to study alignment in unicompartmental arthroplasties, provide a more sophisticated method of evaluating knee alignment. These studies must be aligned with correct rotation to be valid. Computerised navigation was probably responsible for some surgeon's dedication to the neutral mechanical axis. The study of Parratte et al from Mayo has received much attention and argued that a neutral mechanical axis did NOT improve success rates at 15 years. It should be noted that these TKA's were expertly performed and even the less well-aligned cases were not “excessively” malaligned. This study does not state that alignment is irrelevant to the success of TKA, but rather that a range of alignments (with stability) might be expected to produce a durable arthroplasty. Concurrent with these developments has been an interest in “under-correcting” knee deformity or allowing osseous anatomy (with compensation for cartilage loss) guide component position. In truth, it is inaccurate to describe conventional “align and balance” techniques as necessarily seeking a neutral mechanical axis. Most classical alignment techniques do, however, alter the angle of component position from the original articular surface angles and theoretically may not function as well with the native soft tissue environment. Surgeons who would align the TKA identically to the arthritic knee may credit previous generations with improving the technology such that this is a possibility. If every patient is to be aligned with this technique, however, this suggests that soft tissue pathology does not exist. As with all complex issues, glib answers are to be avoided and deep analysis is appropriate