Tibial tubercle torsion is associated with patellar height when measured by computed tomography
Joseph D. Giusto, Janina Kaarre, Yongji Kim, Jae‐Sung An, Sally LiArno, Faizan Ahmad, Matthieu Ollivier

TL;DR
This study finds that tibial tubercle torsion is linked to patellar height in CT scans of patients without patellofemoral instability.
Contribution
The study reports a novel association between tibial tubercle torsion and patellar height using CT scans in a large patient cohort.
Findings
The mean tibial tubercle torsion angle was 24.7° in patients without patellofemoral instability.
Higher tibial tubercle torsion angles were associated with increased patellar height (measured by the Insall–Salvati index).
Abstract
To establish an average tibial tubercle (TT) torsion angle from computed tomography (CT) scans of patients without known patellofemoral instability and investigate whether TT torsion angles would differ based on demographics, tibial tubercle‐trochlear groove (TT‐TG) distance and patellar height. The Stryker Orthopaedics Modeling and Analytics (SOMA) database was queried for patients with CT scans and available measures related to patella and TT position. The mean TT torsion angle was compared in patients with an increased and normal TT‐TG distance (≥20 vs. <20 mm) and patellar height (Insall–Salvati [IS] index ≥1.3 vs. <1.3). Measurements of sulcus angle, patellar inclination angle, congruence angle, trochlear groove depth and long limb axis alignment were assessed. A total of 886 knees from 499 patients within the SOMA database were included, with a mean age of 59.4 ± 16.5 years and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLower Extremity Biomechanics and Pathologies · Hip disorders and treatments · Foot and Ankle Surgery
