Objectives: To investigate the relationships among rotational alignment reference axes of distal femur and tibial mechanical axis, and determine the safest rotational alignment reference axis.
Methods: Digital photos were taken of 30 cadaveric lower extremities with knee in extension and flexion at 90 degrees , angles were measured among tibial mechanical axis and a line perpendicular to clinical epicondylar axis, a line perpendicular to surgical epicondylar axis, Whiteside's line and femoral mechanical axis. Statistical analysis of relationships among those axes were performed.
Results: The angles among the tibial mechanical axis and a line perpendicular to the clinical epicondylar axis, a line perpendicular to the surgical epicondylar axis, Whiteside's line and femoral mechanical axis were 0.6 degrees varus, 3.9 degrees varus, 0.2 degrees valgus and 3.0 degrees varus respectively. The angle between the femoral mechanical axis and the tibial mechanical axis was significantly larger than the angles among the tibial mechanical axis and a line perpendicular to the clinical epicondylar axis, the Whiteside's line (P < 0.05). There was no significant difference compared with the angle between a line perpendicular to the surgical epicondylar axis and the tibial mechanical axis. Angles of the clinical epicondylar axis, the surgical epicondylar axis and the Whiteside's line between knee extension and flexion were 2.3 degrees valgus, 0.9 degrees varus and 3.1 degrees valgus respectively.
Conclusion: The surgical epicondylar axis rather than the clinical epicondylar axis or the Whiteside's line is the safest femoral rotational alignment reference axis intraoperatively.
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Knee
December 2024
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Showa University Fujigaoka Hospital, Yokohama, Kanagawa, Japan.
Aims: The aim of the present study was to evaluate the morphology of the distal medial femoral surface during coronal osteotomy in medial closed wedge distal femoral varus osteotomy (MCWDFO) using plain CT.
Methods: Twenty knees (mean age, 55.3 years) were included.
Purpose: It is not known where the anatomical axis of rotation on the tibial side will be in kinematic alignment (KA), a rapidly expanding area of total knee arthroplasty (TKA) alignment technique today. The purpose of this study was to define the tibial axis for KA-TKA.
Methods: Fifty patients who underwent computed tomography (CT) examination of the lower extremities at a single institution were included.
Cureus
October 2024
Academic Clinical Program-Musculoskeletal Sciences, Singapore General Hospital, Singapore, SGP.
Background and objective The epicondyles are commonly used surgical reference landmarks for elbow arthroplasty and external fixator application. This study aimed to investigate whether the epicondylar axis differed from the elbow's true flexion-extension (F-E) axis in terms of both rotational difference and translational offset. Methods Three-dimensional (3D) models of 15 cadaver elbows were created.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKnee
October 2024
University Hospitals Leuven, Department of Trauma Surgery, Leuven, Belgium; KU Leuven - University of Leuven, Department of Development and Regeneration, Leuven, Belgium. Electronic address:
Background: Defining the injury-force mechanism in tibial plateau fractures (TPFs) could help define implant type and position, as well as soft tissues at risk. The aim of this study was to provide an analysis of injury-force-mechanisms in TPFs, including axial rotation.
Methods: The injury-force mechanism was determined for 203 fractures that presented over a period of 3.
Cureus
June 2024
Department of Statistics, Criticare Asia Hospital, Mumbai, IND.
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