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General Orthopaedics

Comparison of Radiographic Results of Total Knee Arthroplsty Using Robot-Assisted and Conventional Manual Method in Severe Varus Deformity

International Society for Technology in Arthroplasty (ISTA) 2012 Annual Congress



Abstract

Introduction

The success of total knee arthroplasty depends on many factors, including the preoperative condition of the patient, the design and materials of the components and surgical techniques. It is important to position the femoral and tibial components accurately and to balance the soft tissues. Malpositioning of the component can lead to failures due to aseptic loosening, instability, polyethylene wear and dislocation of the patella. In order to improve post-operative alignment, computer-aid systems have been developed for total knee arthroplasty. Many clinical and experimental studies of these systems have shown that the accuracy of implanted components can be improved in spite of the increase in costs and operating time. This may not, however, improve the outcome in the short-term. Restoration of the normal mechanical axis of the knee and balancing of the surrounding soft tissues have been shown to have an important bearing on the final outcome of knee replacement operations. In severely deformed knees, whether varus or valgus, these goals may be difficult to achieve. We compared the radiologic results of the mechanical axis and implant position of Total Knee Arthroplasty using a robot-assisted method with conventional manually implanted method in severe varus deformed knee.

Materials and Methods

A data set of 50 consecutive cases that were performed from April 2007 to December 2010 using the robot assisted TKA(Group A) were compared with a data set of 50 consecutive cases from the same period that were done using conventional manual TKA(Group B). All cases had a preoperative mechanical varus deformity >15° and one brand of implant was used on all cases. The diagnosis was primary osteoarthritis in all knees. The operations were performed by one-senior author with the same robot system, ROBODOC (ISS Inc., CA, USA) along with the ORTHODOC (ISS Inc., CA, USA) planning computer. (See Figure 1.) The radiological evaluations included mechanical axis, implant position (α,β,γ,δ angle) according to the system of American Knee Society.

Results

There was a significant difference in the postoperative α, β, γ angle and mechanical axis between two group(p<0.05). In group A, mechanical axis angle changed from preoperative varus 18.5±3.3° to postoperative varus 0.6±1.5° without outlier. In group B, mechanical axis angle changed from varus 19.4±4.2° to varus 2.5±3.8° with 8 outliers. In group A, the mean α, β, γ, δ angle were 96.7°, 90.1°, 1.9°, 86.8° and 93.1°, 88.3°, 3.8°, 85.9° in group B. But we found no loosening and osteolysis at last follow up in both group.

Conclusion

On the basis of our results, patients with severe varus knee(>15°) tended to have more postoperative varus mechanical alignment in conventional manual TKA group than robot-assisted TKA group. We think that robot-assisted TKA is helpful in excessive varus knee in aspect of not only mechanical alignment and implant position but also long term clinical results and implant longevity. However, a long term followup evaluation will be necessary and complications in robot system.