Cureus
September 2024
Introduction Revision Total Knee Arthroplasty (RTKA) is a complex procedure challenged by significant bone loss, necessitating effective restoration techniques. This study investigates the clinical outcomes and complications of metaphyseal sleeves in RTKA with severe metaphyseal bone loss, aiming to evaluate their efficacy over a minimum four-year follow-up. Methods This was a retrospective observational study on 29 patients who underwent RTKA with Anderson Orthopaedic Research Institute (AORI) type II or III bone defects using porous coated tibial and/or femoral metaphyseal sleeves from December 2016 and January 2019.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt Orthop
January 2024
J Robot Surg
December 2023
This study aimed to compare two alignment strategies in the same patient undergoing simultaneous bilateral robotic-assisted TKA (SB-RATKA): mechanical alignment (MA), the gold-standard, and functional alignment (FA), a balance-driven, personalized alignment strategy. The outcome measures included quantitative assessment of soft-tissue release, incidence of knee balance, and post-operative pain. This was a prospective, self-controlled, randomized-controlled trial involving 72 patients who underwent SB-RATKA using the MAKO® robotic system with comparable grades of deformity and pain in both knees.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Patellar resurfacing has long been a contentious subject in TKA with no consensus and the literature yielding disparate results. The aim of this study was to evaluate the long-term functional outcomes and complications of patients undergoing primary TKA without patellar resurfacing (non-resurfacing).
Methods: This study retrospectively analysed 9346 patients who underwent primary manual jig-based TKA without patellar resurfacing at a single high-volume arthroplasty centre between 2010 and 2018.
Introduction: Optimal flexion-extension gap balancing is an important factor in outcomes after total knee arthroplasty. Knees with varus deformities are commonly associated with a greater degree of lateral laxity both in extension and flexion. Residual lateral laxity could be encountered by surgeons during component trialling after robotic-assisted total knee arthroplasty (RATKA), necessitating additional medial soft tissue release for a thicker insert.
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