The Oxford domed lateral unicompartmental knee replacement implant: Increasing wall height reduces the risk of bearing dislocation
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- Publication Date
- Abstract
Due to lateral ligament laxity, bearing dislocation occurs in 1%–6% of Oxford Domed Lateral replacements. Most dislocations are medial but they do rarely occur anteriorly or posteriorly. The aim was to decrease the risk of dislocation. For a bearing to dislocate the femoral component has to be distracted from the tibial component. A robotic-path-planning-algorithm was used with a computer model of the implant in different configurations to determine the Vertical Distraction needed for Dislocation (VDD). With current components, VDD anteriorly/posteriorly was 5.5 to 6.5 mm and medially was 3.5 to 5.75 mm. A thicker bearing increased VDD medially and decreased VDD anteriorly/posteriorly (0.1 mm/1 mm thickness increase). VDD medially increased with the bearing closer to the tibial wall (0.5 mm/1 mm closer), or by increasing the tibial wall height (1 mm/1 mm height increase). VDD anteriorly/posteriorly was not influenced by bearing position or wall height. To prevent collision between the femoral and tibial components an increase in wall height must be accompanied by a similar increase in minimum bearing thickness. Increasing the wall height and minimum bearing thickness by 2 mm and ensuring the bearing is 4 mm or less from the wall increased the minimum VDD medially to 5.5 mm. The lower VDD medially than anteriorly/posteriorly explains why medial dislocation is more common. If the wall height is increased by 2 mm, the minimum bearing thickness is 5 mm and the surgeon ensured the bearing is 4 mm or less from the wall, the medial dislocation rate should be similar to the anterior/posterior dislocation rate, which should be acceptable.
- Publication Details
- Type
- Journal Paper
- Journal
- Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part H: Journal of Engineering in Medicine
- Volume
- 236
- Number
- 3
- Pages
- 349–355
- Digital Object Identifier
- 10.1177/09544119211048558
- Manuscript
- Google Scholar
- Google Scholar
- BibTeX Entry
@article{yang_joeim22,
author = {Irene Yang and Jonathan D Gammell and David W Murray and Stephen J Mellon},
title = {The {Oxford} domed lateral unicompartmental knee replacement implant: Increasing wall height reduces the risk of bearing dislocation},
journal = {Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part H: Journal of Engineering in Medicine},
year = {2022},
volume = {236},
number = {3},
pages = {349--355},
month = mar,
doi = {10.1177/09544119211048558},
}