International Orthopaedics December 2016, Volume 40, Issue 12, pp 2511–2518

Is tibial cut navigation alone sufficient in medial unicompartmental knee arthroplasty? Continuous series of fifty nine procedures

Gicquel, T., Lambotte, J.C., Polard, J.L. et al.
Knee

Purpose

Our purpose was to assess medial unicompartmental knee arthroplasty with navigation alone for the tibial cut and limb alignment. We hypothesised that this technique could be used routinely in practice.

Methods

Outcome measures were tibial cut orientation and residual varus. Six-month post-operative radiographs of 59 knees were assessed.

Results

Tibial cut orientation was within 2° of planned in 70.2 and 76.3 % of knees in the coronal and sagittal planes, respectively (49.1 % in both), within 4° in 91.2 and 91.5 %, respectively (82.5 % in both). All coronal-plane errors were in varus. Excessive planed tibial slope was at risk of excessive varus of the tibial cut. The hip-knee-ankle angle was ≤179° in 81.4 % and the mechanical axis through Kennedy Zone 2 in 59.3 % of knees. Risk factors for inadequate varus were pre-operative hip-knee-ankle angle >176° and strictly articular varus.

Conclusions

Our results are not as good as previously reported with this technique, but taking into account the factors of failure identified, we could enhance the results.


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