Applied Sciences (Mar 2021)

Association between Proximal Tibiofibular Joint Morphology and Knee Alignment in Osteoarthritis Patients

  • Xin-Zheng Qi,
  • Min Zhang,
  • Mao-Dan Nie,
  • Xiao-Ying Ma,
  • Yi-Chao Luan,
  • Cheng-Kung Cheng,
  • Min Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app11052269
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
p. 2269

Abstract

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This study aimed to determine whether proximal tibiofibular joint (PTFJ) morphology was related to knee alignment in osteoarthritis (OA) patients. Methods: 67 OA patients were enrolled in this study. The morphology of the PTFJ including articular shape type, articular surface area, joint inclination, relative articular height, and joint declination were measured from 3D models. The knee alignment of each subject was characterized as varus, normal, or valgus according to the femorotibial angle (FTA). The FTA was measured on weight-bearing X-rays. Multinomial logistic regression analysis was used to evaluate the association between PTFJ morphology and knee alignment. Results: there were significant differences between varus, valgus, and normal FTA groups in terms of shape type (p = 0.021), inclination of the PTFJ (p = 0.025), relative articular height (p = 0.019), and PTFJ declination angle (p = 0.011). A higher relative articular height (OR: 0.608, 95% CI: 0.205–0.998, and p = 0.017) and lower declination angle (OR: 0.632, 95% CI: 0.601–0.887, and p =0.019) were found to be associated with an increased likelihood of having a valgus FTA rather than a varus FTA. Conclusion: our results indicate that PTFJ morphology is associated with knee alignment.

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