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General Orthopaedics

A ROBUST THREE-DIMENSIONAL METHOD TO QUANTIFY TIBIAL PLATEAU OBLIQUITY AND AXIAL ROTATION, WITH IMPLICATIONS FOR KNEE ARTHROPLASY

The International Society for Technology in Arthroplasty (ISTA), 29th Annual Congress, October 2016. PART 2.



Abstract

Background

Surgical planning of long bone surgery often takes place using outdated 2D axes on 2D images such as long leg standing X-rays. This leads to errors and great variation between intra- and inter- observers due to differing frames of reference.

With the advent of 3D planning software, researchers developed 3D axes of the knee such as the Flexion Facet Axis (FFAx) and Trochlear Axis (TrAx), and these proved easy to derive and reliable. Unlike 2D axes, clinicians and scientists can use a single 3D axis to obtain measurements relative to other 3D axes, in all three planes Deriving a 3D axis also does not require an initial frame of reference, such as in trying to derive the 2D Posterior Condylar Axis (PCAx), whereby a slight change in slice orientation will affect its position.

However, there is no 3D axis derived for the tibial plateau yet. Measurements of tibial joint line obliquity are with a 2D axis drawn on AP long leg standing X-rays. The same applies to tibial plateau rotation, as measured by 2D axes drawn on axial CT/MRI slices.

this study aimed to to develop a novel new 3D axis for the tibial plateau to quantify both tibial plateau joint line obliquity and axial rotation.

Methods

Materialise software version 8.0 (Materialise Inc., Belgium) handled segmentation of CT data and for analysis of bony morphology. A line joining the centroids of the medial and lateral tibial plateaus formed the TCAx (Fig1). A line joining the middle coordinate of the TCAx, to the centre of the best-fit sphere between the medial and lateral malleolus formed the Tibial Mechanical Axis (TMAx). A standard frame of reference aligned 72 tibias with the TCAx horizontal in the axial view, and the TMAx aligned parallel to the global reference coordinate system vertical axis. Tibial joint line obliquity was the angle between the TCAx and TMAx on the medial side, also known as the Medial Tibial Plateau Angle (MPTA)(Fig2). The authors compared reliability and accuracy of the TCAx against three other rotational axes of the tibia as described in the literature.

Results

Our methods showed excellent reproducibility using Bland-Altman analysis between intra- and inter-observers. The tibial joint line as defined by the TCAx is oblique (varus) in the majority of knees (MPTA = 85 ± 2°), and becomes perpendicular (MPTA = 90 ± 2°) in constitutional valgus. The TCAx is also parallel to the Anatomical Tibial Axis (ATAx), (SD = 2°), which is currently the gold standard and most reliable axis in defining tibial axial rotation.

Conclusions

The TCAx is a reliable axis for referencing both coronal and rotational alignment of the tibial plateau. it can be used for planning and postoperative analysis of knee replacement. (Fig 3)

The variable obliqueness of the joint line suggests that neutral alignment in knee arthroplasty may not be suitable for all knees.


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