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MEASUREMENT OF DYNAMIC SOFT-TISSUE BALANCE DURING TOTAL KNEE ARTHROPLASTY



Abstract

Complications after total knee arthroplasty (TKR) such as malalignment, instability, subluxation, excessive wear, and loosening have been attributed to poor soft-tissue balance. Traditional approaches for soft-tissue balance involve static measurements in full extension and at 90° flexion. A trial prosthesis instrumented with force transducers was used to measure soft-tissue balance through the entire range of flexion.

The trial prosthesis was instrumented with four force transducers, one at each corner of the tibial tray, and was implanted in four cadaver knees and four patients intra-operatively. Tibial forces were recorded during passive knee flexion after the tibial and femoral bone cuts were made and again after soft-tissue balance was achieved using standard techniques.

In all eight knees measurable imbalance was initially recorded. The differences in forces were a mean of 18 N (range, 6 to 72) mediolateral and a mean of 26 N (range, 13 to 108) anteroposterior. After a routine procedure of soft-tissue balancing, the mean imbalance between the transducers was reduced by 62 % to 87 % (p < 0.05). However, even the knees that appeared perfectly balanced at 0° and 90° flexion, some imbalance occurred [mean 22 N (range, 2 to 34)] at flexion angles other than 0° and 90°.

Soft-tissue balance in TKR remains a complex concept. Even after accurate static balancing was achieved in extension and 90° flexion, dynamic measurements revealed discrepancies in mid flexion, which may explain the wide variation in knee kinematics reported after TKR and in the reported incidences of mid-flexion knee instability. Computer-aided surgical navigation systems can increase the precision and accuracy of component alignment. However, these systems cannot directly address soft-tissue balance and knee tightness. An instrumented tibial prosthesis could be a useful adjunct to enhance the value of these navigation tools.

Correspondence should be addressed to Richard Komistek, PhD, International Society for Technology in Arthroplasty, PO Box 6564, Auburn, CA 95604, USA. E-mail: ista@pacbell.net