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General Orthopaedics

VARIATION OF LOWER LIMB ALIGNMENT BETWEEN STATIC AND DYNAMIC MEASUREMENTS: A COMPARATIVE STUDY BETWEEN RADIOGRAPHS, ROBOTIC-ASSISTED SYSTEM, AND 3D GAIT ANALYSIS IN MEDIAL UNICOMPARTMENTAL KNEE ARTHROPLASTY

International Society for Technology in Arthroplasty (ISTA) meeting, New Early-Career Webinar Series (NEWS), held online, November 2020.



Abstract

Introduction

In prosthetic knee surgery, the axis of the lower limb is often determined only by static radiographic analysis. However, it is relevant to determine if this axis varies during walking, as this may alter the stresses on the implants. The aim of this study was to determine whether pre-operative measurement of the mechanical femorotibial axis (mFTA) varies between static and dynamic analysis in isolated medial femorotibial osteoarthritis.

Methods

Twenty patients scheduled for robotic-assisted medial unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) were included in this prospective study. We compared three measurements of the coronal femorotibial axis: in a static and weightbearing position (on long leg radiographs), in a dynamic but non-weightbearing position (intra-operative acquisition during robotic-assisted UKA), and in a dynamic and weightbearing position (during walking by a gait analysis).

Results

There was no significant difference in the mFTA between radiological (173.9 ± 3.3°), robotic (174.4 ± 3.4°), and gait analysis (172.9 ± 5.1°) measurements (p < 0.05).

Conclusion

There is no significant variation in varus between lying, standing, and while walking in patients who are candidates for medial UKA. This study also allows us to validate the accuracy of the robotic system in varus estimation, and to rely on intra-operative planning as it also reflects the dynamic knee under load.