4.5 Article

Comparison of stability and kinematics of the natural knee versus a PS TKA with a 'third condyle'

Journal

KNEE SURGERY SPORTS TRAUMATOLOGY ARTHROSCOPY
Volume 22, Issue 8, Pages 1778-1785

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00167-014-3016-3

Keywords

Total knee arthroplasty; Postero-stabilized knee; Third condyle; Kinematics

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The goal of this study was to compare the kinematics of knees before and after total knee arthroplasty (TKA) that relies on an inter-condylar 'third condyle'. The hypothesis was that the 'third condyle' provides sufficient flexion stability and induces a close to normal femoral rollback, thus granting natural joint kinematics. Intra-operative navigation data were collected from 29 consecutive cases that received a cemented TKA (HLS Noetos, Tornier SA, France) designed with an inter-condylar 'third condyle' that engages within the tibial insert beyond 35A degrees flexion. Operations were guided by a non-image-based system (BLU-IGS, Orthokey Italia srl, Italy) that recorded relative femoral and tibial positions in native and implanted knees during: passive range of motion, anterior drawer test at 90A degrees flexion, and varus-valgus stress tests at full extension and at 30A degrees flexion. The total internal tibial rotation during flexion was similar for native (8.2 +/- A 4.2A degrees) and implanted knees (8.0 +/- A 5.4A degrees). The lateral femoral condyle was more posterior in implanted knees (1.2 +/- A 9.4 mm) than in native knees (9.5 +/- A 3.6 mm) throughout early flexion (p < 0.01), but this difference diminished beyond 100A degrees flexion (n.s.). The implanted knees did not exhibit paradoxical external tibial rotation. Varus-valgus laxity in full extension was lower for implanted knees than for native knees (p = 0.0221), but at 30A degrees flexion was almost identical for both native and implanted knees. Anteroposterior laxity was similar in implanted and native knees. The 'third condyle' TKA provides similar anteroposterior and mediolateral stability to the natural knee. This feature granted an adequate balance between laxity and constraint to reproduce natural joint kinematics, including smooth femoral rollback, without causing paradoxical external tibial rotation. Comparative study, Level III.

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