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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 98-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 110 - 110
1 Jan 2016
Walker P Lowry M Arno S Borukhov I Bell C
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Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA), has now become a reliable, successful, and widely used treatment for osteoarthritis. Numerous reports indicate that for the majority of patients, the TKA lasts a lifetime with pain relief and the ability to perform most everyday activities. However there are a number of ways in which the procedure can be further improved, the focus here being on function. One of the problems in evaluating function is that it depends upon the inherent ability, motivation, and expectation of the patients. There are several well-used questionnaire systems which capture functional ability objectively. In the effort to simplify evaluation, a ‘forgotten knee’ evaluation has been introduced, the concept being that ‘the ideal TKA design’ would feel and function like a normal knee. Such a measure would include factors such as surgical technique, alignment, and rehabilitation, as well as the TKA design itself. Another approach to evaluation is to measure biomechanical parameters, such as in gait analysis and fluoroscopy, which evaluate kinematic or kinematic parameters, using normal controls for comparison. Nevertheless, such evaluations still include factors other than the TKA design itself, and do not apply to new designs.

The approach taken here for the evaluation of a new TKA design independent of other factors, is to measure the neutral path of motion and the laxity boundaries of the loaded knee on the application of shear and torque over a full range of flexion. The benchmark is the same kinematic data from the normal intact knee. The rationale has some analogy to the ‘forgotten knee’ in that if the laxity response of a design of TKA is the same as that of the anatomic knee itself, the behavior of that implanted knee in any functional condition will be indistinguishable from that of the anatomic knee itself. Such a testing concept has some similarities to the constraint test described in the ASTM standard. In this paper, a novel design algorithm is proposed for creating different design concepts. First, a general morphological form is formulated for each design concept, a Cam-Post PS, a Saddle-Ramp, and a Converging Condyle, all with overall anatomic-like surfaces. Each femoral component is then designed, which is then moved through the normal neutral path and laxity paths, which creates the tibial surface. The concepts are evaluated using a Desktop Knee Machine configured to move the knee dynamically through full flexion while applying combinations of compression, shear and torque; kinematic data being captured optically and plotted using custom software. The normal benchmark was obtained from 10 normal knee specimens, which showed the restraint of the medial femoral condyle to anterior displacement and the overall rollback and laxity laterally. Compared with standard CR and PS designs, the Guided Motion designs were seen to more closely resemble normal. It is proposed that this approach can result in designs which will more likely reproduce a ‘forgotten knee’ and achieve the optimal function for a given patient.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 95-B, Issue SUPP_34 | Pages 194 - 194
1 Dec 2013
Lowry M Walker P
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In different contemporary posterior-stabilized (PS) total knees, there are considerable variations in condylar surface radii and cam-post geometry. This is expected to result in differences in kinematics and functional outcomes in patients. The hypotheses of our study were: 1. Current PS design will show symmetric motion which is different from anatomic motion, and 2. An asymmetric PS design will produce motion closer to normal anatomic motion than symmetric designs.

A special machine was constructed which could implement the ASTM standard test on constraint, by measuring the laxities. The rational for the test is to predict functional laxity ranges which will affect the kinematics in vivo. The machine set the knee at the required flexion angles and applied combinations of compressive, shear, and torque forces, to represent a range of everyday activities. The femorotibial contact points, the neutral path of motion, and the AP and internal-external laxities were used as the motion indicators. The benchmark was the motion data from anatomic knee specimens tested under the same conditions.

Four contemporary PS designs with a range of geometries was selected for the tests, together with a design where the medial side was more constrained, the lateral side was less constrained, and the post was rounded. The output motions were compared between themselves, while all designs were compared with the anatomic data. The PS designs showed major differences in motion characteristics among themselves including the neutral path of motion and the AP and rotational laxities. These differences were related to the constraints of the condyles, and the cam-post designs. The four PS designs showed motion different from anatomic, including symmetric mediolateral motion, susceptibility to excessive AP medial laxity, and reduced laxity in high flexion. The asymmetric Guided Motion design alleviated some but not all of the abnormalities; in particular, while the lateral rollback with flexion and the near-constant position of the medial femoral condyle resembled anatomic behaviour, the rotational laxity was still limited in high flexion. The latter ws observed to be due to the ‘entrapment’ of the femoral condyles between the upwards posterior lip of the tibial plastic, and the posterior of the cam-post, a phenomenon seen on all designs.

The conclusion of the study is that an asymmetric PS design may provide a path to achieving a closer match to anatomic kinematics. This may improve functional outcomes, and even provide a better ‘feel’ to the patient. However, there are still inherent challenges in PS design to closely achieve this goal. Other design configurations have also been formulated which could even more closely reproduce anatomic motion. However a pre-clinical testing method such as presented here, is one method for evaluation and can be used hand-in-hand with computational methods to produce an optimal design. The importance of the benchmark of the anatomic knee and the identification of the important parameters of the ASTM standard, notably the neutral path of motion and the laxity about the neutral path, are important aspects of the design methodology.