Arthroplasty Today (Dec 2019)

Patellar osteolysis after total knee arthroplasty with patellar resurfacing: a potentially underappreciated problem

  • Zachary K. Christopher, MD,
  • David G. Deckey, BS,
  • Andrew S. Chung, DO,
  • Mark J. Spangehl, MD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 4
pp. 435 – 441

Abstract

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Osteolysis of the patella following total knee arthroplasty is both uncommon and poorly described in the literature. We describe 3 cases of total knee arthroplasty with patella resurfacing that later presented with anterior knee pain with patellar osteolysis without evidence of patellar implant failure: 2 males and 1 female patient, all with bilateral knee osteoarthritis. Osteolysis of the patella was identified radiographically between 2 and 16 years from the index procedure. We theorize that high pressures across the patella-femoral joint, in obese or muscular patients, may play a role in the formation of these patellar osteolytic lesions. We suspect that the prevalence of this phenomenon is under-recognized in the literature and may increase with longer term follow-up and awareness. Keywords: Total knee arthroplasty, Osteolysis, Disappearing patella, Patellar resurfacing, Patellofemoral complications