“…When there is full loss of cartilage in the affected compartment, osteotomy is usually no longer considered and UKA offers an alternative to TKA when the other compartments are preserved [12,13,17,32,33]. UKA has several potential advantages compared with TKA such as reduced morbidity, quicker recovery, the preservation of bone stock, and a more physiological knee function [2][3][4]32]. Midterm and long-term studies suggest reasonable outcome at 10 years with survivorship greater than 95% of UKA performed for medial osteoarthritis or osteonecrosis [2,29], but limited long-term followup data are available for lateral UKA in the literature [5,14,17,30,32].…”