Quality of long standing radiographs assessment of the patella position.

Knee

3D-Surgery, Department of General, Trauma and Reconstructive Surgery, University Hospital, LMU, Munich, Germany. Electronic address:

Published: June 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluates leg alignment through long leg standing radiographs (LSR), focusing on correct patella positioning and fibula head superimposition for accurate assessments.
  • It analyzed 741 lower limbs using two measurement techniques and established three quality groups based on the average patella deviation from the center of the knee joint (PD).
  • Results showed that 70.9% of the LSRs fell into the highest quality category (PD ≤ 5 mm), but even this group had FHS values lower than the expected, indicating areas for improvement in radiographic assessments.

Article Abstract

Background: The gold standard for evaluating leg alignment is a long leg standing radiograph (LSR). The research states that a correct LSR should have a patella that is centered and facing forward as well as a fibula head superimposition (FHS) with a tibia that is 1/3 larger than the fibula. The purpose of this study was to determine levels of quality for LSR by quantifying and correlating the patella position and fibular head superimposition.

Method: 741 lower limbs were included using two distinct measurement techniques, we calculated the patella position's (PD) departure from the center of the knee joint (M1 and M2). To measure the inter-rater dependability in assessing PD and FHS, intraclass correlation coefficients were determined. The Bland-Altman approach was used to compare M1 with M2's performance. We created three quality groups based on the average quantity of PD.

Results: The mean PD was 3.5 mm for M1 and 4.1 mm for M2, respectively. Three quality categories were created: group A for PD ≤ 5 mm, group B for PD 5-10 mm, and group C for PD of ≥10 mm. Group A takes up 70.9% of the LSR. Interestingly, group A's FHS was 21.3% than the typical value of 1/3.

Conclusions: The patella's center should be centered within a 5 mm range and the fibular head should be 1/5 covered from the tibia. This study is the first to define quantitative metrics based on LSR analysis.

Level Of Evidence: Level IV (diagnostic retrospective case series).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.knee.2023.02.012DOI Listing

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