articleClinical Orthopaedics and Related ResearchJun 8, 2011Closed access

The Chitranjan Ranawat Award: Is Neutral Mechanical Alignment Normal for All Patients?: The Concept of Constitutional Varus

Barmherzige Schwestern vom heiligen Kreuz · KU Leuven

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Background

Most knee surgeons have believed during TKA neutral mechanical alignment should be restored. A number of patients may exist, however, for whom neutral mechanical alignment is abnormal. Patients with so-called "constitutional varus" knees have had varus alignment since they reached skeletal maturity. Restoring neutral alignment in these cases may in fact be abnormal and undesirable and would likely require some degree of medial soft tissue release to achieve neutral alignment. QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: We investigated what percentage of the normal population has constitutional varus knees and what are the contributing factors. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: We recruited a cohort of 250 asymptomatic adult volunteers between 20 and 27 years old for this cross-sectional study. All volunteers had full-leg standing digital radiographs on which 19 alignment parameters were analyzed. The incidence of constitutional varus alignment was determined and contributing factors were analyzed using multivariate prediction models.

Results

Thirty-two percent of men and 17% of women had constitutional varus knees with a natural mechanical alignment of 3° varus or more. Constitutional varus was associated with increased sports activity during growth, increased femoral varus bowing, an increased varus femoral neck-shaft angle, and an increased femoral anatomic mechanical angle.

Citation impact

1,046
total citations
FWCI
23.71
Percentile
100%
References
45
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Asymptomatic
  • Population
  • Orthodontics
  • Surgery
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Peace, Justice and strong institutions
No related works found for this paper.