The Journal of Arthroplasty, ISSN: 0883-5403, Vol: 16, Issue: 6, Page: 759-767

The effect of stem modularity and mode of fixation on tibial component stability in revision total knee arthroplasty

Laith M. Jazrawi; Bo Bai; Frederick J. Kummer; Rudi Hiebert; Steven A. Stuchin
Knee
The effect of stem length, diameter, and mode of fixation on the motion and stress transfer of a cemented tibial tray were evaluated for in 12 cadaver knees. There was a significant decrease in motion of the tibial tray with increasing press-fit stem length (75–150 mm) and increasing stem diameter (10–14 mm). Cemented tibial stems showed significantly less tray motion than uncemented stems. The short cemented stems produced tray stability equivalent to long press-fit stems. Although there was a trend for increased proximal tibial stress shielding with the use of cement and longer, wider stems, the trend was not statistically significant. Modular, press-fit stems can achieve tray stability similar to a smaller cemented stem and can avoid the potential problems with cement.

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