2016
DOI: 10.1007/s00167-016-4264-1
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Comparison of patellofemoral outcomes after TKA using two prostheses with different patellofemoral design features

Abstract: III.

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Cited by 20 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Several surgeons recommended surgical intervention, such as arthroscopic excision of the nodule [33][34][35] as a treatment option for disabled patients with persistent, painful PCC after nonoperative management. In this study, two cases of patellar clunk syndrome were noted in group A, and the incidence was significantly lower compared to the nine cases in group B and previous studies (Table 4) 33,[36][37][38][39] . We had two cases in group B with painful PCC, which did not reach the point where surgery was needed and were treated with nonoperative management including anti-inflammatory medication and physical therapy for pain relief.…”
Section: Analysis Of Resultscontrasting
confidence: 62%
“…Several surgeons recommended surgical intervention, such as arthroscopic excision of the nodule [33][34][35] as a treatment option for disabled patients with persistent, painful PCC after nonoperative management. In this study, two cases of patellar clunk syndrome were noted in group A, and the incidence was significantly lower compared to the nine cases in group B and previous studies (Table 4) 33,[36][37][38][39] . We had two cases in group B with painful PCC, which did not reach the point where surgery was needed and were treated with nonoperative management including anti-inflammatory medication and physical therapy for pain relief.…”
Section: Analysis Of Resultscontrasting
confidence: 62%
“…Several surgeons recommended surgical intervention, such as arthroscopic excision of the nodule [23,36,37], as a treatment option for disabled patients with persistent, painful PCC after nonoperative management. In this study, 2 cases of patellar clunk syndrome were noted in group A, and the incidence was significantly lower compared to the 9 cases in group B and previous studies (Table 4) [ [23][24][25][26][27]. We had 2 cases in group B with painful PCC, which did not reach the point where surgery was needed and were treated with nonoperative management including anti-inflammatory medication and physical therapy for pain relief.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 44%
“…The outcome of the quality assessment of the included studies was as follows: within the case-control studies, three studies scored 8, 10,38,52 three studies scored 7, 39,40,53 and one study scored 6 29 ; within the cohort studies, one study scored 9, 22 one study scored 8, 54 five studies scored 7, 21,26,30,55,56 and four studies scored 6. 11,23,25,28 Detailed information on the quality assessment is shown (►Supplementary Table 1; available online only).…”
Section: Methodological Quality Assessmentmentioning
confidence: 99%