AI Article Synopsis

  • Patellar malalignment and instability can occur due to tibial tuberosity lateralisation, which can be treated by tuberosity medialisation.
  • A study compared a new computer-based CT measurement method to a conventional one for assessing tibial tubercle trochlear groove distance, using duplicate measurements from four observers on 50 knees.
  • Results showed that the new method significantly reduced measurement errors and improved reliability, suggesting its use for better patient selection for tuberosity medialisation.

Article Abstract

Patellar malalignment leading to objective or potential patella instability can be caused by tibial tuberosity lateralisation. This can be treated with a tuberosity medialisation. CT scan measurements are needed to assess the tibial tubercle trochlear groove distance. When using the previously described methods to determine this distance it can be difficult to determine the anatomical structures on the maximum intensity projection images, and this can lead to measurement error. This study was designed to compare the reliability of a new computer based CT measurement to the previously described method to determine the tibial tubercle trochlear groove distance. For each method, four observers measured each of 50 knees twice. The inter- and intra-observer variability for the conventional method and a new method were determined. Using the conventional method, the number of knees for which the difference between the aggregate mean of all eight measurements and the mean of duplicate measurements per observer greater than 2 mm varied among the observers between 7 and 24 for the 50 knees, while this variation between four and seven for the same 50 knees using the new method. The limits of reproducibility based on measurements from the four different observers improved by 25%, indicating that the measurement error is considerably smaller with the new method. We advise using this more accurate method to improve the selection of patients for a tuberosity medialisation.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.knee.2006.11.003DOI Listing

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