The purpose of this study was to assess prospectively the initial
results of total knee replacement with the standard spherocentric component
and to identify retrospectively the pathogenesis of any unsatisfactory
results. As a consequence of this study, the femoral component was
modified. Thirty-six knees were reviewed twenty-two to fifty-two months
after a standard spherocentric total knee replacement, with a mean
follow-up of thirty-five months. Twenty-five (70 per cent) of the knees had
significant relief of pain and improved function. Eleven knees were not
improved because of confirmed loosening in five, supracondylar fracture in
two, infection in one, and suspected loosening in three. Ten of these
eleven complications became manifest within the first postoperative year.
Alignment in the coronal plane was not consistently precise and
hyperextension was a recurrent problem in twelve of the thirty-six knees. A
modification in the femoral component was made: the stem was lengthened to
10.0 centimeters and the body was reoriented so that there was 5 degrees of
valgus and 15 more degrees of posterior rotation than the original design.
This modified prosthesis was used in twenty-five additional knees, with
definite improvement in alignment, but the follow-up was insufficient to
ascertain the effect of the modification on lossening and fracture.