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Does hyperflex total knee design improve postoperative active flexion? - 07/06/10

Doi : 10.1016/j.otsr.2009.11.015 
P. Massin a, , F.-R. Dupuy a, H. Khlifi c, C. Fornasieri c, T. De Polignac c, P. Schifrine c, C. Farenq d, P. Mertl b
a Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Bichat Hospital, North-Paris Teaching Hospitals Group, Paris Diderot Medical School, 46, rue Henri-Huchard, 75877 Paris cedex 18, France 
b Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, North Hospital, Amiens Teaching Hospital Center, place Victor-Pauchet, 80054 Amiens cedex 1, France 
c General Private Hospital, 4, chemin Tour-de-la-Reine, 74000 Annecy, France 
d Saint-Jean Private Hospital, 36, avenue Bouisson-Bertrand, 34000 Montpellier, France 

Corresponding author.

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Summary

Introduction

The rotating platform flexion (RPF) Sigma total knee prosthesis (DePuy; Warsaw, Indiana) was designed for maintaining the contact of the condyles with their corresponding tibial plateau throughout the high-flexion range. However, this requires an additional 3-mm bone cut of the posterior condyles. Compared to the conventional design, this modification is intended to improve the flexion range. This hypothesis was tested by studying the increase in flexion (flexion gain, range of motion [ROM], active flexion) of 59 consecutive patients who had received the hyperflex design implant (RPF), whose preoperative mobility values were retrospectively compared to these same values in another 59 consecutive matched patients who had received an implant with the conventional design of the same implant (rotating platform [RP]) between June 2005 and June 2006. Postoperative mobility was measured visually with a goniometer.

Patients and methods

Only osteoarthritic knees were eligible to be included. Knees with more than 20° flexion contracture or less than 90° flexion, and patients with a body mass index (BMI) greater than 30 were excluded. Both groups were comparable with regard to age, preoperative mobility values, and BMI. The sex ratio differed significantly, but preoperative mobility did not differ significantly in male and female patients in the RP and in the RPF groups. The difference in sex ratio did not appear to be a bias influencing preoperative mobility.

Results

Overall, the flexion gain was correlated to preoperative flexion (r=−0.75, p<0.001). The flexion gain in the RPF group was significantly greater than in the RP group (13+-20 versus 6+-13; p=0.02) as was the ROM gain (10±17° versus 4±12°; p=0.02). However, the one-year active mean flexions were not significantly different (118±14° versus 116±6°; p=0.47). In patients whose preoperative flexion was less than 120° (18 and 27 RPF prostheses), the flexion and ROM gains were significantly greater in the RPF group (23±16° versus 14±16°; p=0.03 and 26±18° versus 17±9°; p=0.05), and the mean one-year active flexion was also greater in the RPF group (124±13° versus 116±8°, p=0.02). In patients with more than 120° of preoperative flexion, the flexion and ROM gains and the final mean flexions in both groups were comparable. In particular, there were nine patients in the RP group and ten patients in the RPF group whose flexion decreased.

Conclusion

Thus, the Sigma RPF prosthesis provided a significant additional flexion gain in patients with 90–120° preoperative flexion, and less than 20° flexion contracture. Patients with a preoperative flexion greater than 120° were exposed to a decrease in flexion range whichever implant was used, RP or RPF.

Level of evidence

Level 3, therapeutic study.

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Keywords : Total knee arthroplasty (TKA), TKA flexion, Knee osteoarthritis


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Vol 96 - N° 4

P. 376-380 - juin 2010 Retour au numéro
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