# Comparison of short-term clinical results between modified kinematically-aligned and guided motion bicruciate stabilized total knee arthroplasty

**Authors:** Kensuke Anjiki, Naoki Nakano, Kazunari Ishida, Koji Takayama, Masahiro Fujita, Tomoyuki Kamenaga, Masanori Tsubosaka, Yuichi Kuroda, Shinya Hayashi, Ryosuke Kuroda, Tomoyuki Matsumoto

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s42836-024-00257-z · Arthroplasty · 2024-07-04

## TL;DR

This study compares two types of knee replacement surgeries and finds that one performs better in terms of patient outcomes and tolerance to alignment issues.

## Contribution

The study provides new evidence on the clinical performance and rotational mismatch tolerance of two TKA techniques.

## Key findings

- KA-TKA showed better objective knee indicators, patient satisfaction, and functional scores than BCS-TKA.
- Rotational mismatch negatively affected outcomes in BCS-TKA but not in KA-TKA.
- KA-TKA appears to tolerate rotational mismatch better than BCS-TKA.

## Abstract

Both kinematically-aligned (KA) total knee arthroplasty (TKA) and bicruciate stabilized (BCS) TKA aim to reproduce the physiological knee kinematics. In this study, we compared the femoro-tibial component rotational mismatch between patients who underwent modified KA-TKA and those who received guided-motion BCS-TKA, and its influence on the clinical outcomes.

In this retrospective study, 77 consecutive patients were included and divided into two groups: subjects who underwent modified KA-TKA with Persona (KA Group; n = 42) and those who received BCS-TKA with JOURNEY II (BCS group; n = 35). Range of motion, the 2011 Knee Society Score (KSS), the rotational alignment of the femoral and tibial components, and the correlations between the rotational mismatch and the 2011 KSS subscales were examined.

The postoperative objective knee indicators (P = 0.0157), patient satisfaction (P = 0.0039) and functional activity scores (P = 0.0013) in the KA group were significantly superior to those in the BCS group 1 year postoperatively. There was no significant difference between the two groups observed in the rotational mismatch. In the BCS group, significant negative correlations were identified between the rotational mismatch and objective indicators, patient satisfaction, and functional activity scores but not in the KA group.

The short-term clinical results following KA-TKA showed superior objective knee indicators, patient satisfaction and functional activity scores. A negative correlation was observed between component rotational mismatch and the 2011 KSS subscales in the BCS group, compared to no relationship found between the two in the KA group. These findings suggested that KA-TKA has a relatively higher tolerance for rotational mismatch than BCS-TKA.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11223350/full.md

## References

48 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11223350/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11223350