articleJournal of Bone and Joint SurgerySep 1, 2010Closed access

Effect of Postoperative Mechanical Axis Alignment on the Fifteen-Year Survival of Modern, Cemented Total Knee Replacements

Mayo Clinic · WinnMed

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

One long-held tenet of total knee arthroplasty is that implant durability is maximized when postoperative limb alignment is corrected to 0° ± 3° relative to the mechanical axis. Recently, substantial health-care resources have been devoted to computer navigation systems that allow surgeons to more often achieve that alignment. We hypothesized that a postoperative mechanical axis of 0° ± 3° would result in better long-term survival of total knee arthroplasty implants as compared with that in a group of outliers.

Methods

Clinical and radiographic data were reviewed retrospectively to determine the fifteen-year Kaplan-Meier survival rate following 398 primary total knee arthroplasties performed with cement in 280 patients from 1985 to 1990. Preoperatively, most knees were in varus mechanical alignment (mean and standard deviation, 6° ± 8.8° of varus [range, 30° of varus to 22° of valgus]), whereas postoperatively most knees were corrected to neutral (mean and standard deviation, 0° ± 2.8° [range, 8° of varus to 9° of valgus]). Postoperatively, we defined a mechanically aligned group of 292 knees (with a mechanical axis of 0° ± 3°) and an outlier group of 106 knees (with a mechanical axis of beyond 0° ± 3°).

Citation impact

800
total citations
FWCI
36.39
Percentile
100%
References
34
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Valgus
  • Medicine
  • Implant
  • Total knee arthroplasty
  • Radiography
  • Arthroplasty
  • Oxford knee score
  • Surgery
No related works found for this paper.