Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research: November 2001 - Volume 392 - Issue - p 56-61

In a prospective, multicenter study evaluating one revision knee system, 33 of 409 patients underwent morselized bone grafting for tibial and femoral defects. Fifty-four percent of defects were bicondylar and the defect volumes averaged 36 cc 3 . There was no difference in preoperative or postoperative knee scores between patients undergoing morselized grafting and the entire group. Radiographic evaluation showed remodeling of the grafted areas consistent with viable incorporation of the graft. The incidence of radiolucent lines, at 2 years followup, was not different between the patients who received grafting and the patients who did not receive grafting. There have been no clinical failures or reoperations in the patients who received morselized bone grafting. Morselized bone grafting seems to offer a viable alternative in the reconstruction of osseous defects in patients undergoing revision total knee arthroplasty.

Stiehl, James B. MD*; Komistek, Richard D. PhD**; Haas, Brian MD**; Dennis, Douglas A. MD**
Knee

Frontal plane kinematics including condylar lift-off and medial to lateral translation were investigated in 10 patients who had total knee arthroplasty with a mobile-bearing rotating platform or a similar implant that had been modified with a posterior stabilizer. The rotating platform had condylar lift-off (average, 2 mm) and medial tibial translation (average, 4.3 mm) in all implants tested. The posterior-stabilized prosthesis had significantly less condylar lift-off (average, 1.2 mm) and medial translation (average, 1.7 mm). The difference is attributed to constraint of the posterior stabilizer mechanism in the frontal plane. The important kinematic functions of frontal plane condylar lift-off and medial to lateral translation must be accounted for by contemporary total knee prosthetic designs because abnormalities may lead to abnormal wear and loss of prosthetic fixation.


Link to article