Innocenti Matteo, Zanna Luigi, Akkaya Mustafa, Huber Kim, Christen Bernhard, Calliess Tilman
Department of Orthopaedics, University Hospital of Florence, 50139 Florence, Italy.
Ankara City Hospital, 06800 Ankara, Turkey.
J Pers Med. 2023 Apr 4;13(4):632. doi: 10.3390/jpm13040632.
The accurate positioning of the prosthetic components is essential for achieving successful results in medial unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (mUKA). The tibial component rotation in image-based robotic-assisted UKA is usually based on tibial bony landmarks matched to the pre-operative CT model. The study aimed to evaluate whether setting the tibial rotation on femoral CT-based landmarks allows congruent knee kinematics. We retrospectively analyzed data from 210 consecutive image-based robotic-assisted mUKA cases. In every case, we set the tibia rotation landmark parallel to the posterior condylar axis and centered it on the trochlea groove defined on the preoperative CT scan. The implant positioning was primarily set parallel to this rotation landmark and then adjusted based on tibial sizes avoiding component over- or under-hang. During surgery, we recorded the knee kinematics under valgus stress to reduce the arthritic deformity. A femoral-tibial contact point was recorded over the entire range of motion and displayed as a tracking profile on the tibia implant. The femoro-tibial tracking angle (FTTA) was then calculated based on a tangent line to the femoro-tibial tracking-points and the difference to the femur-based rotation landmark. In 48% of the cases, we could position the tibia component exactly to the femoral rotation landmark, whereas in 52% of cases, minimal adjustments were made to avoid component's under- or over-hang. The mean tibia component rotation (TRA) with reference to our femur-based landmark was +0.24° (SD ± 2.9°). The femur-based tibia rotation landmark showed a high correspondence to the FTTA with 60% of the cases having less than 1° of deviation. Mean FTTA was +0.7° (SD ± 2.2°). The mean difference between the absolute value of the TRA and the FTTA (|TRA| - |FTTA|) was -0.18° (SD ± 2°). Setting the tibial component rotation based on CT scan femoral landmarks and not on tibial anatomical landmarks is a reliable method to obtain congruent knee kinematics during image-based robotic-assisted medial UKA with less the 2° deviations on average.
在膝关节内侧单髁置换术(mUKA)中,假体组件的精确放置对于取得成功的手术效果至关重要。在基于图像的机器人辅助UKA中,胫骨组件的旋转通常基于与术前CT模型匹配的胫骨骨性标志。本研究旨在评估基于股骨CT标志设置胫骨旋转是否能实现膝关节的一致运动学。我们回顾性分析了210例连续的基于图像的机器人辅助mUKA病例的数据。在每个病例中,我们将胫骨旋转标志设置为与后髁轴平行,并将其置于术前CT扫描所定义的滑车沟中心。植入物的放置首先设置为与该旋转标志平行,然后根据胫骨尺寸进行调整,以避免组件悬垂过多或过少。在手术过程中,我们记录了在 valgus 应力下的膝关节运动学,以减轻关节炎畸形。在整个运动范围内记录股骨 - 胫骨接触点,并在胫骨植入物上显示为跟踪曲线。然后根据股骨 - 胫骨跟踪点的切线以及与基于股骨的旋转标志的差异计算股骨 - 胫骨跟踪角(FTTA)。在48%的病例中,我们能够将胫骨组件精确放置到股骨旋转标志处,而在52%的病例中,进行了最小程度的调整以避免组件悬垂不足或过多。相对于我们基于股骨的标志,胫骨组件的平均旋转(TRA)为 +0.24°(标准差 ± 2.9°)。基于股骨的胫骨旋转标志与FTTA具有高度相关性,60%的病例偏差小于1°。平均FTTA为 +0.7°(标准差 ± 2.2°)。TRA绝对值与FTTA的平均差值(|TRA| - |FTTA|)为 -0.18°(标准差 ± 2°)。在基于图像的机器人辅助内侧UKA中,基于CT扫描股骨标志而非胫骨解剖标志设置胫骨组件旋转是一种可靠的方法,平均偏差小于2°时可实现膝关节的一致运动学。