The Knee, VOLUME 29, P291-297, MARCH 01, 2021

Intraoperative kinematics of bicruciate-stabilized total knee arthroplasty during high-flexion motion of the knee

Kenichi Kono Hiroshi Inui Shuji Taketomi Ryota Yamagami Kohei Kawaguchi Shin Sameshima Tomofumi Kage Sakae Tanaka
Knee

Background

It is unknown whether intraoperative kinematics of bicruciate-stabilized total knee arthroplasty (BCS-TKA) are different for different activities. It has also not been established whether intraoperative high-flexion motions correlate with postoperative patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs). We aimed to clarify the intraoperative kinematics of BCS-TKA during high-flexion activities and describe the relationship between intraoperative and postoperative patient-reported outcomes.

Methods

We examined 33 knees from 31 patients who underwent BCS-TKA and measured intraoperative knee kinematics, passive knee flexion, and cross-legged flexion using a navigation system. We also calculated knee flexion, varus-valgus, and rotation angles. As a secondary evaluation, we divided the patients into two clusters based on the PROMs and compared the kinematics between them.

Results

The valgus moved by 1.3 ± 1.3° beyond 90° knee flexion during passive flexion. In contrast, during cross-legged flexion, the varus moved by 4.6 ± 5.1° beyond 30° flexion. This indicated significantly increased varus alignment in the cross-legged flexion as compared with passive flexion. Beyond 60° of flexion, the femur displayed 8.8 ± 4.8° of external rotation relative to the tibia. In cross-legged flexion, the femur displayed 9.2 ± 6.5° of external rotation relative to the tibia beyond 45° of flexion. At 90° of flexion, the cross-legged knees rotated more externally. There were no significant postoperative differences between the high- and low-score clusters.

Conclusion

The intraoperative knee kinematics after BCS-TKA during high-flexion motions differed depending on the performance of an individual. This will be useful for physicians who might recommend BCS-TKA to new patients.

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