The Journal of Arthroplasty, ISSN: 0883-5403, Vol: 25, Issue: 2, Page: 238-243

Variability in Femoral Component Rotation Reference Axes Measured During Navigation-Assisted Total Knee Arthroplasty Using Gap Technique

Moon, Young-Wan; Seo, Jai-Gon; Lim, Seung-Jae; Yang, Jae-Hyuk
Knee

The basic objective in total knee arthroplasty is to achieve the correct amount of femoral component rotation, and this can be achieved either with a measured resection technique or indirectly with a flexion/extension gap equalization technique. We studied variability in the reference axes (posterior condylar axis, Whiteside’s line, transepicondylar axis) when soft tissue tension was managed intraoperatively using a navigation system. The mean angles for the transepicondylar line, Whiteside’s line, and the posterior condylar line from the proximal tibia resection plane were 1.29° ± 3.67° (mean ± SD; range, −7° to 10.5°), 3.90° ± 4.17° (mean ± SD; range, −3° to 15.5°), and −4.03° ± 2.71° (mean ± SD; range, −9.5° to 1.0°), respectively. The coefficients of variation (SD/mean ×100) for these 3 variables were 283%, 106%, and 67%, respectively. Of the 3 reference axes used widely for femoral component rotation, the angles from the posterior condylar line to the proximal tibia resection plane showed the smallest range of variance.


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