The Journal of Arthroplasty, ISSN: 0883-5403, Vol: 24, Issue: 2, Page: 281-287

Association of Increased Knee Flexion and Patella Clunk Syndrome After Mini-Subvastus Total Knee Arthroplasty

Schroer, William C; Diesfeld, Paul J; Reedy, Mary E; LeMarr, Angela
Knee

This study reviewed 747 consecutive posterior stabilized total knee arthroplasty (TKA) to explain the increased incidence of patella clunk syndrome that occurred when the surgeon switched from a medial parapatellar arthrotomy to a mini-subvastus (MIS) TKA technique. The incidence of patella clunk syndrome increased with increased postoperative knee flexion. Six weeks after surgery, knees that developed patella clunk had a mean flexion of 124° vs 117° for knees that did not develop this syndrome (P = .016). As the MIS approach resulted in increased knee flexion, this approach was indirectly associated with the increased incidence of patella clunk. Knee flexion at 6 weeks postoperatively was 117° for the MIS knees vs 108° for traditional medial parapatellar arthrotomy knees (P < .001). The effect of increased knee flexion achieved with the MIS approach, which resulted in an increase in patella clunk, was mitigated by using a new posterior stabilized femoral component designed to minimize soft tissue entrapment.


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