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Controlling the motion of total knee replacements using intercondylar guide surfaces
Author(s) -
Walker Peter S.,
Sathasivam Shivani
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
journal of orthopaedic research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.041
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1554-527X
pISSN - 0736-0266
DOI - 10.1002/jor.1100180108
Subject(s) - total knee replacement , motion (physics) , orthodontics , environmental science , computer science , medicine , artificial intelligence , surgery
Total knee replacements using intercondylar cams, such as posterior stabilized types, have been in use for many years. In a previous study, software was written to analyze an alternative shape of the intercondylar cams. The goal of the current study was to investigate in a more general way the potential of intercondylar cams, or guide surfaces, for reproducing the anterior‐posterior motion of the natural knee throughout the flexion range. Typical sagittal outlines for the femoral and tibial bearing surfaces were defined, and a parametrized shape for the femoral guide surface was defined to produce a wide range of shapes. Software was written in which the femoral component was flexed in increments, with the posterior translation defined as a function of the flexion angle. The shape of the tibial guide surface was derived from the locus of the femoral guide surface at its multiple flexion positions. By iterating methodically through possible shapes of femoral guide surfaces, several types of total knee replacement components in common use today were identified, as well as other configurations of potential interest. For quantification of a given design, the software calculated the anterior and posterior laxity at each flexion angle. Laxity was defined as the motion before the femoral guide surface impacted the tibial guide surface or until the contact point of the bearing surfaces reached a specified slope. Convex femoral and concave saddle‐shaped tibial guide surfaces produced small laxities in both directions over most of the flexion range. A saddle design with small laxities in the first half of flexion, combined with a posterior stabilized feature, was an interesting combination. Potential improvements to the currently used designs were shown in this study and new shapes of intercondylar guide surfaces were derived that could be considered for application.