Journal of Orthopaedic Surgery and Research (Oct 2018)

Accurate determination of post-operative 3D component positioning in total knee arthroplasty: the AURORA protocol

  • Edgar A Wakelin,
  • Linda Tran,
  • Joshua G Twiggs,
  • Willy Theodore,
  • Justin P Roe,
  • Michael I Solomon,
  • Brett A Fritsch,
  • Brad P Miles

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13018-018-0957-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background Successful component alignment is a major metric of success in total knee arthroplasty. Component translational placement, however, is less well reported despite being shown to affect patient outcomes. CT scans and planar X-rays are routinely used to report alignment but do not report measurements as precisely or accurately as modern navigation systems can deliver, or with reference to the pre-operative anatomy. Methods A method is presented here that utilises a CT scan obtained for pre-operative planning and a post-operative CT scan for analysis to recreate a computation model of the knee with patient-specific axes. This model is then used to determine the post-operative component position in 3D space. Results Two subjects were investigated for reproducibility producing 12 sets of results. The maximum error using this technique was 0.9° ± 0.6° in rotation and 0.5 mm ± 0.3 mm in translation. Eleven subjects were investigated for reliability producing 22 sets of results. The intra-class correlation coefficient for each of the three axes of rotation and three primary resection planes was > 0.93 indicating excellent reliability. Conclusions Routine use of this analysis will allow surgeons and engineers to better understand the effect of component alignment as well as the placement on outcome.

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