Title: Total Knee Arthroplasty
1Total Knee Arthroplasty
Dr. Rami Eid
2Introduction
- TKA is one of the most successful and commonly
performed orthopedic surgery. - The best results for TKA at 10 15 yrs. compare
to or surpass the best result of THA.
3Indications for Knee Arthroplasty
4Indications for TKA
- Relieve pain caused by osteoarthritis of the knee
(the most common). - Deformity in patients with variable levels of
pain - Flexion contracture gt 20 degrees.
- Severe varus or valgus laxity.
5Osteoarthritis
- American College of Rheumatology classification
criteria -
- Knee pain and radiographic osteophytes and at
least 1 of the following 3 items - Age gt50 years.
- Morning stiffness lt30 minutes in duration.
- Crepitus on motion.
6Contraindications for TKA
- Recent or current knee sepsis.
- Remote source of ongoing infection.
- Extensor mechanism discontinuity or severe
dysfunction. - Painless, well functioning knee arthrodesis.
- Poor health or systemic diseases (relative
contraindications).
7Unicondylar Knee Arthroplasty
- Indications
- Younger patients with unicompartmental disease
instead of HTO. - Elderly thin patient with unicompartmental
disease (shorter rehabilitation, greater ROM)
- Contraindications
- Flexion contracture gt 5 degrees.
- ROM lt 90 degrees.
- Angular deformity gt 15 degrees.
- Cartilaginous erosion in the weight-bearing area
of the opposite compartment.
8Patellar Resurfacing
- Indication for leaving the patella unresurfaced
- Congruent patellofemoral tracking.
- Normal anatomical patellar shape.
- No evidence of crystalline or inflammatory
arthropathy. - Lighter patient.
9Classification
10Classification
1
3
1- Cruciate retaining 2- Cruciate substituting 3-
Mobile bearing 4- Unicondylar
4
2
11Biomechanics of Knee Arthroplasty
12Kinematics
- The TRIAXIAL motion of the knee
- Articular geometry
- Ligamentous restraints
13Degrees of Freedom
14Degrees of Freedom
- Constrained Prostheses
- Non-constrained Prostheses
- Intermediated Prostheses
15Constrained Prostheses
- Hinged implants.
- One degree of freedom.
16Non-constrained Prostheses
- Ideal implants.
- 5 degrees of freedom.
- Intact ligamentous system.
17Intermediated Prostheses
- Anterior-posterior stability.
- Two types
- FREEMAN (a cylinder in a non conforming trough).
- INSALL (posterior stabilized knee).
18Intermediated Prostheses
Freeman
Insall
19Longitudinal Alignment Of Knee
- Tibial components are implanted perpendicular to
the mechanical axis. - Femoral component is implanted in 5 6 degrees
of valgus.
20Longitudinal Alignment Of Knee
- Posterior tibial tilt is about 5 7 degrees.
- Usually depend on the articular design.
Anatomic tilt 5 degrees
21Rotational Alignment Of Knee
- Create a rectangular flexion space.
- External rotation of the femoral component 3
degrees.
22Role of PCL Femoral Roll-Back
23Role of PCL Femoral Roll-Back
24PCL-retention or PCL-substitution ?
- PCL retaining prostheses
- Better ROM (roll-back, flat tibial surface).
- More symmetrical gait (stair climbing).
- Less femoral bone resection is required.
- PCL needs to be accuracy balanced.
- PCL substituting prostheses
- Easier surgical exposure.
- See-saw effect prevention.
- Lower tibial polyethylene contact stress
- Posterior tibial component displacement.
- Patella clunk syndrome.
25PCL-retention or PCL-substitution ?
26PCL-retention or PCL-substitution ?
27Patella Clunk Syndrome
28Patellofemoral Joint
- The patella acts to lengthen extensor lever arm.
- This arm is greatest at 20 degrees of flexion.
29Patellofemoral Joint
- Changes in the patellar area of contact can leads
to eccentric loading of the patellofemoral joint.
30Patellofemoral Joint
- Limb with larger Q angle has a greater tendency
for lateral subluxation. - Preventing subluxation
- Prosthetic component.
- Vastus medialis (in early flexion).
31Polyethylene Issues
1- Dished polyethylene avoids the edge loading.
(as PCL substitution) 2- Minimal polyethylene
thickness gt 8 mm to avoid higher contact stress.
32Surgical Technique for Primary TKA
33Preoperative Evaluation
- Soft tissue defects around the knee.
- Vascular status to the limb.
- Extensor mechanism.
- Preoperative range of motion.
- Standing (AP) view, a lateral view of the knee,
and a skyline view of the patella.
34Surgical Preparation
- Administer a dose of a 1st generation
cephalosporin (or vancomycin, clindamycin) - Avoid pressure on peripheral nerves.
35Surgical Approaches
- Medial parapatellar retinacular approach.
- Subvastus approach.
- Midvastus approach.
36Surgical Approaches
- Subvastus approach
- Intact extensor mechanism.
- Decreasing pain.
- More limited.
- Postoperative hematoma.
- Midvastus approach
- Preserve genicular a. to the patella.
- Contraindication in limited preoperative flexion.
- Postoperative hematoma.
37Surgical Approaches
- Lateral parapatellar retinacular approach
- In valgus knees.
- Improve patellar tracking and ligamentous
balancing.
38Bone Preparation IM Femoral Guide
39Bone Preparation Gap Technique
40Bone Preparation Tibial Resection
- The guide is aligned with the anterior tibial
tendon and first web space of the toes.
41Balancing of The Knee
42Varus Deformity
- 1st Osteophytes must be removed.
- 2nd Release the deep MCL.
- 3rd Release semimembranosus and pes anserinus
insertion. - 4th release posterior capsule and PCL.
43Varus Deformity
44Valgus Deformity
- 1st Remove all osteophytes.
- 2nd release lateral capsule.
- 3rd
- Lesser deformity release Iliotibial band.
- Greater deformity release LCL /- PCL.
- Valgus deformity flexion contracture gtgt release
posterior capsule.
45Valgus Deformity
46Flexion Contracture
- Extension gap lt Flexion gap gtgt more distal
femoral bone cut, posterior capsule release. - Flexion gap lt Extension gap gtgt larger tibial
insert.
47Flexion Extension Balancing
48Computer Assisted Surgery in Total Knee
Arthroplasty
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53Management of Bone Deficiency
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56Patellofemoral Tracking
- Internal rotation of tibial component increases
the tendency to lateral patellar subluxation. - Prosthetic patella should be medially positioned.
57Postoperative Management
58Roentgenographic Evaluation
59Total knee replacement exercise protocol
- Postoperative day 1
- Bedside exercises (e.g. ankle pumps, quadriceps
exercises) - Postoperative day 2
- Exercises for active ROM and terminal knee
extension - Gait training with assistive device
- Postoperative day 3-5
- Progression of ambulation on level surfaces and
stairs (if applicable) - Postoperative day 5 to 4 weeks
- Stretching of quadriceps and hamstring muscles
- Progression of ambulation distance
60Specific Disorders
61Previous HTO
- Difficult surgical exposure.
- Lateral ligamentous laxity.
- Difficult stem placement.
- Patella infera.
62Previous Patellectomy
- PCL retaining arthroplasty for better results.
63Complications of Total Knee Arthroplasty
- Thromboembolism.
- Infection.
- Neurovascular complications.
- Patellofemoral complications.
- Periprosthetic fractures.
64Patellofemoral Complications
- Patella clunk syndrome.
- Patellar component failure.
- Rupture of patellar ligament.
65Periprosthetic Fractures
66THANK YOU
67MoKazem.com
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????????. - This lecture is one of a series of lectures were
prepared and presented by residents in the
department of orthopedics in Damascus hospital,
under the supervision of Dr. Bashar Mirali. - This site is not responsible of any mistake may
exist in this lecture.
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Dr. Muayad Kadhim