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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXV | Pages 254 - 254
1 Jun 2012
Velyvis J Coon T Roche M Kreuzer S Horowitz S Jamieson M Conditt M
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Introduction

Bicompartmental osteoarthritis involving the medial tibiofemoral and the patellofemoral compartments is often treated with total knee replacement. Improved implants and surgical techniques have led to renewed interest in bicompartmental arthroplasty. This study evaluates the radiographic and early clinical results of bicompartmental arthroplasty with separate unlinked components implanted with the assistance of a robotic surgical arm. In addition, we examine the amount of bone resected using unlinked bicompartmental components compared to total knee replacement. Finally, a retrospective review of total knee cases examines the applicability of this early intervention procedure.

Methods

97 patients received simultaneous but geometrically separate medial tibiofemoral and patellofemoral arthroplasties with implants specifically designed to take advantage of a new bone and tissue sparing implantation technique using haptic robotics. These patients came from four surgeons at four different hospitals. The average follow-up was 9 months. Pre- and post-operative radiographs were taken. ROM, KSS and WOMAC scores were recorded. The patients had an average age of 67 yrs (range: 45-95), BMI of 29 ± 4kg/m2. 47% of the patients were male.

We retrospectively reviewed pre and post operative notes from 406 consecutive TKA patients from a single surgeon. Intraoperative data included the integrity of the three compartments and the ACL.