Total Knee Arthroplasty for Patellofemoral Arthritis

BackgroundMultiple treatment methods have been advocated for patellofemoral arthritis. The purpose of the present study was to report on our experience with the use of total joint replacement for the treatment of primarily severe patellofemoral arthritis of the knee in patients more than fifty-five...

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Published inJournal of bone and joint surgery. American volume Vol. 84; no. 11; pp. 1977 - 1981
Main Authors Mont, Michael A, Haas, Steve, Mullick, Tarun, Hungerford, David S
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Boston, MA Copyright by The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Incorporated 01.11.2002
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery Incorporated
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery AMERICAN VOLUME
EditionAmerican volume
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Summary:BackgroundMultiple treatment methods have been advocated for patellofemoral arthritis. The purpose of the present study was to report on our experience with the use of total joint replacement for the treatment of primarily severe patellofemoral arthritis of the knee in patients more than fifty-five years of age.MethodsBetween January 1980 and December 1994, thirty knee replacements were performed in twenty-seven patients for the treatment of arthritis that primarily involved the patellofemoral joint. The Ahlbäck radiographic evaluation scale was used to grade the severity of arthritis; the mean score was 4.83 points (range, 4 to 5 points) for the patellofemoral compartment and 0.6 point (range, 0 to 1 point) for both the medial and lateral compartments. The patients included eighteen women and nine men who had a mean age of seventy-three years (range, fifty-nine to eighty-eight years). None of the patients had had any prior procedures on the knee, but all had been treated for a minimum of six months with nonoperative measures. The mean preoperative Knee Society score was 50 points (range, 20 to 64 points).ResultsAt a mean duration of follow-up of eighty-one months (range, forty-eight to 133 months), there were twenty-eight excellent, one good, and one poor result. The mean Knee Society objective score was 93 points (range, 67 to 100 points). The poor result was in a patient who sustained a rupture of the patellar tendon postoperatively as the result of a fall, which necessitated a tendon reconstruction.ConclusionTotal knee arthroplasty was found to be a viable treatment option in patients more than fifty-five years of age with primarily severe patellofemoral disease.
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ISSN:0021-9355
1535-1386
DOI:10.2106/00004623-200211000-00011