The Knee, ISSN: 1873-5800, Vol: 26, Issue: 2, Page: 405-409

Does bone cement influence soft tissue balancing in total knee arthroplasty?

van der Linde, Just A; Leong, Anthony K L
Knee

Background

Soft tissue tension significantly affects the function of total knee arthroplasties. This study aims to evaluate if there is a difference in soft tissue tension, comparing trails to cemented definitive components in TKA.

Methods

We prospectively compared femorotibial compartment pressures before and after cement fixation of the components in 40 primary TKA. Femorotibial pressures were measured in the medial and lateral compartment with the knee in 10°, 45°, and 90° of flexion (six measurements per TKA), and the difference in pressure between both compartments was calculated in the three positions.

Results

The median femorotibial pressures were not significantly different following cement fixation. There was, however, a change in the difference between medial and lateral compartment pressures after cement fixation. The difference between both compartment pressures decreases after cement fixation. This difference is statistically significant only with the knee in 10° of flexion; mean (IQR) pressures change from 8.5 (five to 14) pounds to six (2.25–10) pounds (P = 0.01).

Conclusion

Compartment pressures in TKA do not significantly change after cement fixation. The number of TKA that qualifies as ‘balanced’ increases after cement fixation, predominantly because the differences between the medial and lateral compartment pressures decrease.


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