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Is the lateral tibial spine a reliable landmark for planning tibial or femoral valgus osteotomies?

Authors :
Martin Tripon
Pierre Sautet
Jean-Noël Argenson
Christophe Jacquet
Pierre Martz
Matthieu Ollivier
Source :
Orthopaedicstraumatology, surgeryresearch : OTSR. 108(3)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

A valgus osteotomy around the knee is a conservative procedure performed to unload the medial tibiofemoral compartment. However, the optimal postoperative alignment target remains controversial. Many studies have applied a "Fujisawa point" at 62.5%. The results of recent studies suggest decreasing the range of the mechanical axis target correction to 50-55%. The primary purpose of this study was to define the mean position of the lateral tibial spine in healthy patients from a reproducible 3-dimensional (3D) analysis. The study hypothesis was that the apex of the lateral tibial spine was a reliable and reproducible landmark for planning valgus osteotomies and preventing overcorrections.The study included 1140 patients: 560 women and 580 men, with a mean age of 61.7±16.5 years (18-98) and a mean body mass index (BMI) of 24.9±4.9kg/mThe mean tibial plateau width was 72.9±5.7mm (59.1-91.1). The mean position of the lateral tibial spine was 53.6±1.1% (48.9-57.2). The mean position of the medial tibial spine was 48.4±2.5% (43.6-56.1) while the center of the tibial spines was 51.0±1.5% (46.4-56.1). Africans had a significantly more lateral mean tibial spine position than Asians (54.7% vs. 53.3%, p=0.001), Caucasians (54.7% vs. 53.7%, p=0.002) and Middle Easterners (54.7% vs. 53.6%, p=0.034).The lateral tibial spine is a simple and reproducible bony landmark. This landmark can be used when planning valgus osteotomies aiming for a "Fujisawa point" at 54%.IV.

Details

ISSN :
18770568
Volume :
108
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Orthopaedicstraumatology, surgeryresearch : OTSR
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....560b0fb6d5dedc5b111676f90b67de6f