Enhancing the radiological classification system from the distal femur to the proximal tibia

This study aims to identify anatomical variants of the proximal tibia shaft and to develop a novel classification system for proximal tibia. Between October 2019 and April 2020, a total of 200 patients with standard knee anteroposterior radiographs were included in this study. We measured the inner...

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Published inJoint diseases and related surgery Vol. 33; no. 1; pp. 33 - 39
Main Authors De Matteo, Vincenzo, Forero, Felipe, Busch, Sophia-Marlene, Linke, Philip, Wilhelm, Peter, Rademacher, Kristof, Gehrke, Thorsten, Citak, Mustafa
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Turkey Bayçınar Medical Publishing 01.01.2022
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Summary:This study aims to identify anatomical variants of the proximal tibia shaft and to develop a novel classification system for proximal tibia. Between October 2019 and April 2020, a total of 200 patients with standard knee anteroposterior radiographs were included in this study. We measured the inner diameter of the tibia 16 cm distally from the tibial plateau and 3 cm distally from the tibial spine. The ratio between these two measurements was applied as the novel index ratio. A total number of 197 patients (100 males and 97 females) with a median age of 68 years (range, 21 to 89 years) were included in the final analysis. According to the 25 and 75 percentiles, three groups were clustered for each sex. A higher distribution of the type B pattern was found in female and male patients. However, type A with a narrow inner diaphyseal diameter was less common in female patients. The median intraobserver reliability for rater 1 was 0.998. The inter-observer reliability was high (intraclass correlation coefficient: 0.998). There was a moderate correlation between the anteroposterior (AP) diameter and height (r=0.568) and a low correlation between the AP diameter and weight (r=0.376). The novel index shows no significant correlation between the index ratio and height (r=0.082), weight (r=0.014) or body mass index (r=-0.038). The novel classification presents three different types of tibia for each sex: type C has a wider inner diaphyseal diameter compared to type A with a narrow inner diaphyseal diameter. Type B has the widest distribution among the subjects.
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ISSN:2687-4784
2687-4792
2687-4792
DOI:10.52312/jdrs.2022.602