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Coronal alignment in total knee replacement HISTORICAL REVIEW, CONTEMPORARY ANALYSIS, AND FUTURE DIRECTION

Journal

BONE & JOINT JOURNAL
Volume 96B, Issue 7, Pages 857-862

Publisher

BRITISH EDITORIAL SOC BONE JOINT SURGERY
DOI: 10.1302/0301-620X.96B7.33946

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Funding

  1. Biomet
  2. DePuy
  3. Stryker
  4. Zimmer
  5. Smith Nephew

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Substantial healthcare resources have been devoted to computer navigation and patient-specific instrumentation systems that improve the reproducibility with which neutral mechanical alignment can be achieved following total knee replacement (TKR). This choice of alignment is based on the long-held tenet that the alignment of the limb post-operatively should be within 3 of a neutral mechanical axis. Several recent studies have demonstrated no significant difference in survivorship when comparing well aligned versus malaligned TKRs. Our aim was to review the anatomical alignment of the knee, the historical and contemporary data on a neutral mechanical axis in TKR, and the feasibility of kinematically-aligned TKRs. Review of the literature suggests that a neutral mechanical axis remains the optimal guide to alignment.

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