4.5 Article

Sagittal plane kinematics of fixed- and mobile-bearing total knee replacements

Journal

KNEE SURGERY SPORTS TRAUMATOLOGY ARTHROSCOPY
Volume 19, Issue 9, Pages 1488-1495

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00167-011-1462-8

Keywords

Knee; Arthroplasty; Mobile bearing; Kinematics; Fluoroscopy

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Purpose The objective of this prospective, randomized, patient- and observer-blinded study was to analyze, in vivo, the knee joint kinematics in the sagittal plane in a patient population that had received either a fixed or a mobile TKA. Methods Thirty-one patients (57 knees) were evaluated by means of fluoroscopy during unloaded flexion and extension against gravity as well as during step up and step down with full weight bearing. In these 31 patients, 22 fixed-bearing TKAs, 16 mobile-bearing TKAs, and 19 natural knee joints were included. Fluoroscopic radiographs were evaluated by measuring the patella tendon angle in relation to the knee flexion angle, as a measure of anteroposterior translation, as well as the kinematic index, as a measure of reproducibility. Results During unloaded movement, fluoroscopic analysis did not show a significant difference between both types of prosthesis design and the natural knee. In the weight-bearing movement, both types of TKA designs revealed a more linear patellar tendon angle curve, with a greater angle in extension and in flexion than in the natural knees. In the mobile-bearing group, interindividual deviations from the mean during weight-bearing movements were significantly less than in the fixed-bearing group. Conclusions No functional advantage of mobile-bearing TKA over fixed-bearing devices could be found. Both TKA designs showed the typical kinematics of an anterior instability. These results only apply to cruciate retaining mobile-bearing TKA with a bearing that allows both rotation and anteroposterior translation, using a sagittal plane kinematics analysis evaluated by such methodology. A possible influence of less variability of the kinematic pattern on clinical results still needs to be confirmed. Level of evidence Prospective comparative study, Level II.

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