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Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 8, Issue 5 | Pages 207 - 215
1 May 2019
Key S Scott G Stammers JG Freeman MAR Pinskerova V Field RE Skinner J Banks SA

Objectives

The medially spherical GMK Sphere (Medacta International AG, Castel San Pietro, Switzerland) total knee arthroplasty (TKA) was previously shown to accommodate lateral rollback while pivoting around a stable medial compartment, aiming to replicate native knee kinematics in which some coronal laxity, especially laterally, is also present. We assess coronal plane kinematics of the GMK Sphere and explore the occurrence and pattern of articular separation during static and dynamic activities.

Methods

Using pulsed fluoroscopy and image matching, the coronal kinematics and articular surface separation of 16 well-functioning TKAs were studied during weight-bearing and non-weight-bearing, static, and dynamic activities. The closest distances between the modelled articular surfaces were examined with respect to knee position, and proportions of joint poses exhibiting separation were computed.


The Bone & Joint Journal
Vol. 100-B, Issue 10 | Pages 1303 - 1309
1 Oct 2018
Nodzo SR Chang C Carroll KM Barlow BT Banks SA Padgett DE Mayman DJ Jerabek SA

Aims

The aim of this study was to evaluate the accuracy of implant placement when using robotic assistance during total hip arthroplasty (THA).

Patients and Methods

A total of 20 patients underwent a planned THA using preoperative CT scans and robotic-assisted software. There were nine men and 11 women (n = 20 hips) with a mean age of 60.8 years (sd 6.0). Pelvic and femoral bone models were constructed by segmenting both preoperative and postoperative CT scan images. The preoperative anatomical landmarks using the robotic-assisted system were matched to the postoperative 3D reconstructions of the pelvis. Acetabular and femoral component positions as measured intraoperatively and postoperatively were evaluated and compared.


Bone & Joint Research
Vol. 5, Issue 3 | Pages 80 - 86
1 Mar 2016
Scott G Imam MA Eifert A Freeman MAR Pinskerova V Field RE Skinner J Banks SA

Objectives

Throughout the 20th Century, it has been postulated that the knee moves on the basis of a four-bar link mechanism composed of the cruciate ligaments, the femur and the tibia. As a consequence, the femur has been thought to roll back with flexion, and total knee arthroplasty (TKA) prostheses have been designed on this basis. Recent work, however, has proposed that at a position of between 0° and 120° the medial femoral condyle does not move anteroposteriorly whereas the lateral femoral condyle tends, but is not obliged, to roll back – a combination of movements which equates to tibial internal/ femoral external rotation with flexion. The aim of this paper was to assess if the articular geometry of the GMK Sphere TKA could recreate the natural knee movements in situ/in vivo.

Methods

The pattern of knee movement was studied in 15 patients (six male: nine female; one male with bilateral TKAs) with 16 GMK Sphere implants, at a mean age of 66 years (53 to 76) with a mean BMI of 30 kg/m2 (20 to 35). The motions of all 16 knees were observed using pulsed fluoroscopy during a number of weight-bearing and non-weight-bearing static and dynamic activities.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_XXV | Pages 39 - 39
1 Jun 2012
Delport H Bartels W Banks SA Sloten JVD Bellemans J
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In general TKA can be divided into two distinct groups: cruciate retaining and cruciate substituting. The cam and post of the latter system is in fact a mechanical substitution of the intricate posterior cruciate ligament. In our previous work we and many other investigators have focused on the movement of the femoral component relative to the tibial tray. Little information is available about the relative movement between the cam part of the femoral component and the post of the tibial insert. In this study we determine the distance and the changes in distance between the cam of the femoral component and the tibial post during extension, flexion at 90° and full flexion. The secondary purpose is to analyse possible differences between FBPS and MBPS TKA.

Methods

12 subjects' knees were imaged using fluoroscopy from extension over 90° to maximum kneeling flexion. The images were digitized. The 3-dimensional (3D) position and orientation of the implant components were determined using model-based shape-matching techniques, manual matching, and image-space optimization routines. The implant surface model was projected onto the geometry-corrected image, and its 3D pose was iteratively adjusted to match its silhouette with the silhouette of the subject's TKA components. The results of this shapematching process have standard errors of approximately 0.5° to 1.0° for rotations and 0.5 mm to 1.0 mm for translations in the sagittal plane. Joint kinematics were determined from the 3D pose of each TKA component using the 3-1-2 Cardan angle convention. This process resulted in a distance map of the femoral and tibial surfaces, from which the minimum separations were determined for the purpose of this study between cam and post (fig1.).

Separation distances between the tibial polyethylene (PE) insert's post and the femoral prosthesis component have been calculated in three steps. First, the surface models of all three components as well as their position and orientation were extracted from the data files produced by the fluoroscopic kinematic analysis. Next, a set of 12 points were located on the post of each tibial insert (fig2.). Finally, for each point, the distance to the femoral component was quantified. For each step in this process, custom MATLAB(r) (The MathWorks(tm) Inc., Natick, MA, USA) programs were used.

For each of the 12 points on the post, a line was constructed through the point and parallel to the outward-facing local surface normal of the post. The resulting set of lines was then intersected with the femoral component model. Intersection points where lines ran “out of” the femoral component, detected by a positive dot product of the femoral component surface normal with the post surface normal (used to define the line), were discarded.

Finally, the distances between the 12 points on the post and the intersection points on each line were calculated. For each line, the smallest distance was retained as a measure of the separation between insert and femoral component. Where a line did not intersect the femoral component, the corresponding separation distance was set to infinity.

In each position, distances are measured at 6 pairs of points. Two indices of asymmetry are analysed:

The absolute difference between both measurements within a pair. Perfect symmetry is present when this absolute difference equals zero.

The proportion of pairs where one of both measurements equals infinity. Indeed, this situation refers to the presence of ‘extreme’ asymmetry.

A linear model for repeated measures is used to analyse the absolute differences as a function of the between-subjects factor condition (mobile bearing or fixed bearing) and the within-subject factors position (4 levels) and pair (6 levels). More specifically, a direct likelihood approach is adopted using a compound symmetric covariance matrix.

Results

There is a significant difference in absolute difference between the fixed and mobile bearing condition (p=0.046). On average, the absolute difference is higher in the fixed bearing condition, 1.75 (95%CI: 1.39;2.11) vs 1.20 (95%CI:0.78;1.62). (fig2.).


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 93-B, Issue SUPP_IV | Pages 517 - 517
1 Nov 2011
Chouteau J Lerat JL Testa R Fessy MH Banks SA Moyen B
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Purpose of the study: The purpose of this study was to use weight-bearing radiographies to study the mobility of the polyethylene insert in relation to the femoral and tibial components of a total knee arthroplasty (TKA) with preservation of the posterior cruciate ligament and a mobile plateau with rotation and anterioposterior translation (INNEX® Anterior-Posterior Glide, Zimmer).

Material and methods: A 3D kinematic study of the femoral and tibial component and the mobile insert was conducted on a series of 51 first-intention TKA using a computer-assisted matching system between 3D prosthetic models and the radiographic silhouette of the implants.

Results: At mean 23 months postoperatively, the poly-ethylene tibial insert exhibited an increase in its internal rotation during flexion. This rotation, knee extended, was limited to rotation between the insert and the tibial base. With increased flexion, there was an increase in the value and the portion of rotation involving the femoral component in relation with the mobile tibial insert.

Discussion: The degree of insert mobility has varied depending on the report. Certain authors have reported relatively limited mobility because of a minimally congruent superior surface allowing anteroposterior and mediolateral translation as the femur glided over the insert. Others report mobility of the mobile plateau in relation to the tibial base and minimal rotation of the femoral component. Rotation of the polyethylene insert in TKAs with a mobile plateau appears to be quite variable. With the LCS AP Glide prosthesis, anteroposterior translation of the mobile plateau was measured at a mean 5.6 mm (1–1.125 mm). Paradoxical anterior translation, rather than posterior translation, of the mobile plateau with flexion has been reported in a few patients.

Conclusion: The mobile plateau has exhibited progressive increase in internal rotation with flexion. We have concluded that the major part of the mobility occurs between the mobile plateau and the tibial base. However, with flexion, the femoral component increased its mobility over the plateau. During flexion, anteroposterior translation occurred between the femoral piece and the tibial insert, and between the tibial insert and the tibial base, but the direction of the translation of the mobile tibial insert appeared to be unpredictable with the non-constrained prosthesis used for this study.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 92-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 407 - 407
1 Jul 2010
Whatling GM Larcher M Young P Evans J Jones D Banks SA Fregly BJ Khurana A Kumar A Williams RW Wilson C Holt CA
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Introduction: Inaccuracies in kinematic data recording due to skin movement artefact are inherent with motion analysis. Image registration techniques have been used extensively to measure joint kinematics more accurately. The aim of this study was to assess the feasibility of using MRI for creating 3D models and to quantify errors in data collection methods by comparing kinematics computed from motion analysis and image registration.

Methodology : 5 healthy and 5 TKR knees were examined for a step up/down task using dynamic fluoroscopy and motion capture. MRI scans of the knee, femur and tibia were performed on the healthy subjects and were subsequently segmented using ScanIP(Simpleware) to produce 3D bone models. Registration of the models produced from fine and coarse scan data was used to produce bony axes for the femoral and tibial models. Tibial and femoral component CAD models were obtained for the TKR patients. The 3D knee solid models and the TKR CAD models were then registered to a series of frames from the 2D fluoroscopic image data (Figure 1) obtained for the 10 subjects, using KneeTrack(S. Banks, Florida) to produce kinematic waveforms. The same subjects were also recorded whilst performing the same action, using a Qualisys (Sweden) motion capture system with a pointer and marker cluster-based technique developed to quantify the knee kinematics.

Results: The motion analysis method measured significantly larger frontal and transverse knee rotations and significantly larger translations than the image registration method.

Conclusion: The study demonstrated that MRI, rather than CT scan, can be used as a non-invasive tool for developing segmented 3D bone models, thus avoiding highly invasive CT scanning on healthy volunteers. It describes an application of combining fine and coarse scan models to establish anatomical or mechanical axes within the bones for use with kinematic modeling software. It also demonstrates a method to investigate errors associated with measuring knee kinematics.


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 90-B, Issue SUPP_I | Pages 173 - 173
1 Mar 2008
Kudo Y Nozaki H Banks SA Suguro T
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Medial pivot total knee arthroplasty is designed to permit posterior rolling and sliding of the lateral femoral condyle around a stable medial femoral condyle. The purpose of the current study was to analyze the weight-bearing kinematics of medial pivot TKA’s with three different treatments of the posterior cruciate ligament: PCL resected, PCL partially released and PCL retained, to determine if the PCL status had a significant effect on tibiofemoral translations or rotations in a medial pivot TKA design.

In vivo kinematics were determined for 17 clinically successful total knee arthroplasties during a stair-climbing activity using lateral fluoroscopy and shape matching techniques.

All three groups showed similar medial pivot motions. PCL retained knees showed significantly greater tibial internal rotation than PCL resected knees for flexion of 30° and greater. Rotation of the PCL released knees was midway between PCL resected and PCL retained knees

Regardless of PCL treatment, patients with medial pivot total knee arthroplasties had medial pivot motion patterns during stair climbing activities. This study showed a clear and intuitive trend in motions with PCL-treatment, such that knees with partially released PCL’s had kinematics midway between those where the PCL was either fully maintained or fully resected.


The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery British Volume
Vol. 88-B, Issue 8 | Pages 1016 - 1021
1 Aug 2006
Delport HP Banks SA De Schepper J Bellemans J

Mobile-bearing posterior-stabilised knee replacements have been developed as an alternative to the standard fixed- and mobile-bearing designs. However, little is known about the in vivo kinematics of this new group of implants. We investigated 31 patients who had undergone a total knee replacement with a similar prosthetic design but with three different options: fixed-bearing posterior cruciate ligament-retaining, fixed-bearing posterior-stabilised and mobile-bearing posterior-stabilised. To do this we used a three-dimensional to two-dimensional model registration technique. Both the fixed- and mobile-bearing posterior-stabilised configurations used the same femoral component. We found that fixed-bearing posterior stabilised and mobile-bearing posterior-stabilised knee replacements demonstrated similar kinematic patterns, with consistent femoral roll-back during flexion. Mobile-bearing posterior-stabilised knee replacements demonstrated greater and more natural internal rotation of the tibia during flexion than fixed-bearing posterior-stabilised designs. Such rotation occurred at the interface between the insert and tibial tray for mobile-bearing posterior-stabilised designs. However, for fixed-bearing posterior-stabilised designs, rotation occurred at the proximal surface of the bearing. Posterior cruciate ligament-retaining knee replacements demonstrated paradoxical sliding forward of the femur.

We conclude that mobile-bearing posterior-stabilised knee replacements reproduce internal rotation of the tibia more closely during flexion than fixed-bearing posterior-stabilised designs. Furthermore, mobile-bearing posterior-stabilised knee replacements demonstrate a unidirectional movement which occurs at the upper and lower sides of the mobile insert. The femur moves in an anteroposterior direction on the upper surface of the insert, whereas the movement at the lower surface is pure rotation. Such unidirectional movement may lead to less wear when compared with the multidirectional movement seen in fixed-bearing posterior-stabilised knee replacements, and should be associated with more evenly applied cam-post stresses.