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Moderate varus/valgus malalignment after total knee arthroplasty has little effect on knee function or muscle strength: 91 patients assessed after 1 year
Authors:Justinas Stucinskas  Otto Robertsson  Aurimas Sirka  Aleksej Lebedev  Hans Wingstrand  Sarunas Tarasevicius
Institution:1.Department of Orthopaedics, Lithuanian University of Health Sciences, Kaunas, Lithuania;2.Department of Clinical Sciences and Department of Orthopaedics, Lund University and Lund University Hospital, Lund, Sweden.
Abstract:Background and purpose — Postoperative muscle strength and component alignment are important factors affecting functional results after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). We are not aware of any studies that have investigated the relationship between them. We therefore investigated whether coronal malalignment of the mechanical axis and/or of individual implant components would affect knee muscle strength and function 1 year after TKA surgery.Patients and methods — We included 120 consecutive osteoarthritis (OA) patients admitted for TKA. Preoperative active range of motion (ROM) of the knee, patient age, sex, and BMI were recorded and the Knee Society score (KSS) and knee joint extensor/flexor muscle strength were assessed. At 1-year follow-up, the mechanical and coronal component alignment was measured from a postoperative long standing radiograph, and ROM, KSS, and muscle strength measurements were taken in 91 patients. Functional outcome and muscle strength measurements were compared between normally aligned and malaligned TKA groups.Results — 29 of 91 TKAs were malaligned, i.e. they deviated more than 3° from the neutral mechanical axis. 18 femoral components and 15 tibial components were malaligned. Before surgery, the malaligned and normally aligned groups were similar regarding sex distribution, BMI, ROM, KSS, and muscle strength. At the 1-year follow-up, the differences between the groups regarding knee joint function and muscle strength were small, not statistically significant, and barely clinically relevant.Interpretation — Moderate varus/valgus malalignment of the mechanical axis or of individual components has no relevant clinical effect on function or muscle strength 1 year after TKA surgery.Failure to restore limb alignment in total knee arthroplasty (TKA) increases the risk of revision (Jeffery et al. 1991, Ritter et al. 1994 and 2011, Berend et al. 2004), but the effect of accurate postoperative alignment on TKA function is controversial (Lotke and Ecker 1977, Choong et al. 2009, Fang et al. 2009, Longstaff et al. 2009, Huang et al. 2012).Huang et al. (2012) reported that TKAs with a coronal alignment within 3° from the neutral axis had better function and quality of life at 5-year follow-up than TKAs that deviated more than 3° from neutral alignment. Other studies comparing computer-assisted TKA with conventional TKA surgery have not been able to correlate malalignment with inferior functional outcomes (Spencer et al. 2007, Kamat et al. 2009, Kim et al. 2009, Burnett and Barrack 2013).Patients with greater preoperative muscle strength have been reported to have faster recovery and better functional outcome after TKA (Mizner et al. 2005, Yoshida et al. 2008). However, full recovery of muscle strength after TKA is uncommon (Berth et al. 2002, Valtonen et al. 2009, Maffiuletti et al. 2010, Vahtrik et al. 2012).It is plausible that failure to restore the mechanical axis restoration results in inferior muscle function. Sogabe et al. (2009) found different cross-sectional areas in the quadriceps muscles with different knee alignments. They suggested that knees with varus or valgus deformation should have poorer muscle function compared to normally aligned knees. However, we have not been able find any studies investigating muscle strength after TKA in relation to component alignment and mechanical axis restoration.We investigated whether coronal malalignment of the mechanical axis and/or of individual implant components would affect knee muscle strength and function 1 year after TKA surgery.
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