AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to assess the angle differences in the external rotation of femoral components during knee surgeries between genders and lower limb alignment in Korean osteoarthritis patients.
  • 1273 MR images were analyzed to create 3D models, focusing on various axes used as references for knee alignment.
  • Results showed significant gender differences in femoral alignment, but lower limb alignment (varus vs. valgus) did not show notable differences, indicating the potential for tailored surgical approaches based on gender in knee replacement procedures.

Article Abstract

To compare the angle between the external rotation references of the femoral components in the axial plane by gender and lower limb alignment in Korean patients with osteoarthritis (OA). Magnetic resonance (MR) images of 1273 patients were imported into a modeling software and segmented to develop three-dimensional femoral bony and cartilaginous models. The surgical transepicondylar axis (sTEA), posterior condylar axis (PCA), the kinematically aligned axis (KAA), and anteroposterior axis were used as rotational references in the axial plane for mechanically aligned (MA) TKA. The relationship among axes were investigated. Among 1273 patients, 942 were female and 331 were male. According to lower limb alignment, the varus and valgus knee groups comprised 848 and 425 patients, respectively. All measurements, except PCA-sTEA, differed significantly between men and women; all measurements, except PCA-sTEA, did not differ significantly between the varus and valgus knee groups. In elderly Korean patients with OA, rotational alignment of the distal femur showed gender differences, but no differences were seen according to lower limb alignment. The concern for malrotation of femoral components during kinematically aligned TKA is less in Koreans than in Caucasians and relatively less in women than in men. In MA TKA, malrotation of the femoral components can be avoided by setting different rotational alignments for the genders.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8396944PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm10163691DOI Listing

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