Analysis of the morphology of the distal femur, and by extension of the femoral components in total knee arthroplasty (TKA), has been related to the aspect ratio, which represents the width of the femur. Little is known about variations in trapezoidicity (i.e whether the femur is more rectangular or more trapezoidal). This study aimed to quantify additional morphological characteristics of the distal femur and identify anatomical features associated with higher risks of over- or under-sizing of components in TKA. We analyzed the shape of 114 arthritic knees at the time of primary TKA using the pre-operative CT scans. The maximum AP dimension was measured. The mediolateral dimensions were measured on the theoretical distal resection slice at three levels: the posterior region (MLP), the central region (MLC) and the anterior region (MLA) (Fig 1). The ‘aspect’ ratio (MLC/AP) ratio quantified how wide or narrow the shape is. The ‘trapezoidicity’ ratio (MLP/MLA) ratio quantified how rectangular or trapezoidal the shape is. We also quantified the medial and lateral ‘narrowing angles’ in the anterior and central zones (α and β) (Fig 2). The post-operative prosthetic overhang was calculated from CT-scan. We compared the morphological characteristics with those of twelve TKA models scanned using a three-dimensional optical scanning machine (ATOS II, GOM mbH, Braunschweig, Germany) and its photogrammetric analysis software (TRITOP, GOM mbH, Braunschweig, Germany).Purpose
Method
(1) to investigate the relationships between the bony contours of the knee and the Popliteus Tendon (PT) in the healthy knee and after implantation of a TKA and (2) to analyze the influence of implant sizing. With an apparently well-sized TKA, the position of the PT during knee flexion is modified compared with the preoperative situation.Goals of the study
Hypothesis