Background:
A patient with collapse of a femoral condyle caused by osteonecrosis
has few treatment options other than total knee arthroplasty. The
purpose of this study was to report the clinical and radiographic
outcome of total knee arthroplasty for osteonecrosis.
Methods:
Between 1987 and 1996, thirty-two total knee arthroplasties were
performed with cement in thirty patients with osteonecrosis of the
femoral condyle and/or tibial plateau. The study group included
twenty-forty women and five men with a mean age of fifty-four years
(range, thirty-one to seventy-seven years) at the time of the arthroplasty.
Twenty-two patients had atraumatic osteonecrosis associated with
corticosteroid use, and eight had spontaneous osteonecrosis. All patients
had a complete clinical and radiographic evaluation at a mean of
108 months (range, forty-eight to 144 months) postoperatively.
Results:
Overall, thirty-one (97%) of the thirty-two knees had a successful
clinical outcome. The mean Knee Society score improved from 54 points
preoperatively to 95 points at the time of the latest follow-up.
No evidence of progressive radiolucency was found around any prosthetic
component.
Conclusions:
Previous studies have demonstrated less-than-optimal results following
total knee arthroplasty in patients with osteonecrosis. The excellent
results found in the present study may have been secondary to the
use of cemented implants in all cases and ancillary stems when appropriate.