Proximal tibia vara involves the medial shift of the tibial articular surface

Author:

Kawasaki Makoto1,Nagamine Ryuji2ORCID,Chen Weijia2,Ma Yuan3,Sakai Akinori1,Suguro Toru4

Affiliation:

1. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, School of Medicine, University of Occupational and Environmental Health, Kitakyushu, Japan

2. Center of Artificial Joint and Rheumatism, Fukuoka Tokushukai Medical Center, Kasuga, Japan

3. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Graduate School of Medicine, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan

4. Japan Research Institute of Artificial Joint, Kisarazu, Japan

Abstract

Purpose: According to the concept of the constitutional varus, the tibial articular surface (TAS) has varus inclination. On the other hand, it has been reported that proximal tibia vara involved medial shift of the TAS. However, it has not been assessed whether varus inclination of the TAS has a correlation with the medial shift. We investigated whether varus inclination of the TAS has a correlation with the medial shift. If there is a correlation between two parameters, the influence of the medial shift of the TAS on the value of the hip–knee–ankle (HKA) angle and the femorotibial angle should be considered. Methods: A total of 112 patients who underwent total knee arthroplasty had anteroposterior view tibia digital radiograph on which five parameters were analyzed. Varus angle of the TAS, the distance between the mechanical axis and the anatomical axis on the articular surface, and the width of the articular surface were measured. Results: The more the proximal tibia had varus deformity, the more the TAS shift medially would be. Therefore, the mechanical axis does not match the anatomical axis. Because the HKA angle was assessed based on the concept that the mechanical and anatomical axes match on the tibia, this angle may not express the true alignment of the lower extremity in knees with proximal tibia vara. Conclusion: In varus knees, the proximal tibia has a medial shift of the TAS that may influence the value of the HKA angle.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Surgery

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