Journal of Orthopaedics, Trauma and Rehabilitation (Nov 2021)

Is there difference and correlation between medial and lateral tibial plateau coronal obliquity in native knee? A radiographic study

  • Thomas Ka Chun Leung,
  • Will Wai Hong Lau,
  • Wing Chiu Fung,
  • Vincent Wai Kwan Chan,
  • Amy Cheung,
  • Man Hong Cheung,
  • Henry Fu,
  • Chun Hoi Yan,
  • Ping Keung Chan,
  • Kwong Yuen Chiu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/22104917211056940
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28

Abstract

Read online

Background/Purpose Knee joint line is commonly defined as a tangent to medial and lateral tibial plateaus in various radiographic measurements. We aim to investigate radiographic differences between medial and lateral knee joint line coronal obliquity. It has significant implication on radiographic analysis following unicompartmental knee arthroplasty. Methods We analysed the knee radiographs of 48 young patients (mean age 25.1 + /-5.6 years) with 50 anterior cruciate ligament-deficient knees. Medial and lateral tibial plateau coronal obliquity were defined as angles between femoral knee joint line and the tangent to articular surface of each tibial plateau. Mediolateral differences and linear correlation were analysed. Results Significant difference was found between medial (mean = -1.5, SD = 2.4 degrees) and lateral obliquity (mean = + 0.6, SD = 3.0 degrees) ( p < 0.001). The mean mediolateral difference was 3.1 degrees (SD = 2.8, range 0–11.8 degrees), without significant correlation (r = 0.085, p = 0.56). Conclusion Mediolateral differences exist in knee joint line obliquity. Each compartment should be considered separately when measuring knee joint line obliquity.