Of 168 consecutive knees (118 patients) that had been treated with an
arthroplasty with use of a kinematic total condylar prosthesis that allowed
retention of the posterior cruciate ligament, 119 knees (eighty-four
patients) were available for review at a mean of 10.0 +/- 0.7 years after
the operation. The Hospital for Special Surgery knee score improved
significantly, from a mean of 55 +/- 12 points preoperatively to a mean of
81 +/- 9 points at ten years (p < 0.0001). Radiolucent lines about the
patellar component, present in thirty-five of eighty-three knees at the
latest follow-up examination, were related to malpositioning of the tibial
and femoral components. Six revisions were performed, and four of them were
for a loose patellar component. The rate of deep infection was 1 per cent
(one knee). Complications occurred in twenty-six knees (22 per cent). With
revision as the end point, the rate of survival of the prostheses was
estimated to be 96 per cent at ten years. The knee scores, the rate of
survival of the implants, and the range of motion of the knees in the
current study were similar to those reported previously for patients who
had insertion of a total condylar prosthesis with sacrifice of the
posterior cruciate ligament and for those who had substitution of the
posterior cruciate ligament with a posterior stabilized prosthesis. A
prosthesis that has a metal-backed tibial component and that allows
preservation of the posterior cruciate ligament provides durable results,
but loosening of the patellar component remains a major problem.