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General Orthopaedics

ROBOTIC-ARM ASSISTED TOTAL KNEE ARTHROPLASTY IN KNEES WITH VARUS DEFORMITY

International Society for Technology in Arthroplasty (ISTA) meeting, 32nd Annual Congress, Toronto, Canada, October 2019. Part 1 of 2.



Abstract

Introduction

Robotics have been applied to total knee arthroplasty (TKA) to improve surgical precision in components’ placement, providing a physiologic ligament tensioning throughout knee range of motion. The purpose of the present study is to evaluate femoral and tibial components’ positioning in robotic-assisted TKA after fine-tuning according to soft tissue tensioning, aiming symmetric and balanced medial and lateral gaps in flexion/extension.

Materials and Methods

Forty-three consecutive patients undergoing robotic-assisted TKA between November 2017 and November 2018 were included. Pre-operative radiographs were performed and measured according to Paley's. The tibial and femoral cuts were performed based on the individual intra-operative fine-tuning, checking for components’ size and placement, aiming symmetric medial and lateral gaps in flexion/extension. Cuts were adapted to radiographic epiphyseal anatomy and respecting ±2° boundaries from neutral coronal alignment. Robotic data were recorded, collecting information relative to medial and lateral gaps in flexion and extension.

Results

Patients were divided based on the pre-operative coronal mechanical femoro-tibial angle (mFTA). Only knees with varus deformity (mFTA<178°), 29 cases, were taken into account. On average, the tibial component was placed at 1.2°±0.5 varus. Femoral component fine-tuning based on soft-tissues tensioning in extension and flexion determined the following alignments: 0.2°±1.2 varus on the coronal plane and 1.2°±2.2° external rotation with respect to the trans-epicondylar axis (TEA) as measured on the CT scan in the horizontal plane. The average gaps after femoral and tibial resections, resulted as follows: 19.5±0.8 mm on the medial side in extension, 20.0±0.9 mm on the lateral side in extension, 19.1±0.7 mm on the medial side in flexion and 19.5±0.7 mm on the lateral side in flexion. On average, the post-implant coronal alignment as reported by the robotic system resulted 2.0°±1.5 varus.

Discussion

The proposed robotic-arm assisted TKA technique, aiming to preserve the integrity of the ligaments, provides balanced and symmetric gaps in flexion and extension and an anatomic femoral and tibial component's placement with post-implant coronal alignment within ±2° from neutral alignment.