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The Effect of Preoperative Planning Method on Recommended Tibial Tuberosity Advancement Cage Size
Author(s) -
Cadmus Jill,
Palmer Ross H.,
Duncan Colleen
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
veterinary surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.652
H-Index - 79
eISSN - 1532-950X
pISSN - 0161-3499
DOI - 10.1111/j.1532-950x.2014.12126.x
Subject(s) - medicine , tibial tuberosity , cage , orthodontics , tibia , surgery , mathematics , combinatorics
Objective To determine if use of various commonly practiced tibial tuberosity advancement (TTA) preoperative planning methods leads to variable TTA cage size recommendations. Study Design Radiographic study. Animals Dogs (n = 14) with naturally occurring cranial cruciate ligament disease. Methods TTA was planned by a single observer on mediolateral stifle radiographs of each dog using 2 sets of tibial plateau landmarks (anatomic [A] vs. femorotibial common tangent [T]) and 2 advancement measurement techniques (transparent overlay [O] vs. simulated TTA using imaging software [S]) for 4 different planning methods (AO, AS, TO, TS). Cage size recommendations for each stifle were tabulated for each of the 4 planning methods. Mean advancement (mm) required to obtain patellar tendon angle (PTA) = 90° for each of the 4 planning methods were statistically compared. Results In the 14 stifles studied, the 4 planning methods evaluated led to 4 different cage size recommendations in 1 stifle, 3 different recommendations in 8 stifles, 2 different recommendations in 3 stifles, and 1 recommendation in only 2 stifles. There was a significant difference in the mean advancement measurement between the 4 planning methods ( P < .0001); the AS technique was the largest whereas TO resulted in the smallest measurement. Overall, larger advancement was associated with use of anatomic landmarks (vs. common tangent) and imaging software to simulate TTA (vs. overlays). Conclusion Currently practiced methods for TTA pre‐planning led to variable cage size recommendations in 86% of the stifles evaluated and may be a source of inconsistent functional outcomes.