2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2004.02.008
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Tibio-femoral movement in the living knee. A study of weight bearing and non-weight bearing knee kinematics using ‘interventional’ MRI

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Cited by 322 publications
(243 citation statements)
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“…Our data show subjects experienced PFR of their lateral condyle (mean 23 mm) and a lesser amount of PFR of their medial condyle (mean 14 mm) during a loaded deep knee bend. We observed greater medial condyle PFR than previously reported for the normal knee [23,25,29], leading to similar axial rotation patterns, but lower in magnitude than that of the normal knee (10.8°for the patients in this study versus 16.8°in the native knee). This greater medial PFR as compared with the normal knee raises concerns because it potentially can overload the medial structures of the knee.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
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“…Our data show subjects experienced PFR of their lateral condyle (mean 23 mm) and a lesser amount of PFR of their medial condyle (mean 14 mm) during a loaded deep knee bend. We observed greater medial condyle PFR than previously reported for the normal knee [23,25,29], leading to similar axial rotation patterns, but lower in magnitude than that of the normal knee (10.8°for the patients in this study versus 16.8°in the native knee). This greater medial PFR as compared with the normal knee raises concerns because it potentially can overload the medial structures of the knee.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…Numerous kinematic analyses of the normal knee have documented greater mean posterior motion of the lateral condyle relative to the medial condyle, leading to a mean internal rotation of the tibia with progressive knee flexion [9,15,23,25,27,29]. Komistek et al reported the lateral condyle achieved more posterior motion than the medial condyle, 19.2 mm and 3.4 mm, respectively, with increasing knee flexion during a deep knee bend [25].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A strong point is the correlation with knee kinematics, since there is, to our knowledge, only two previous study available that correlates the post-cam contact mechanics with knee kinematics during a squat movement [13]. Our results regarding femoral posterior motion of the nexGen LPS prosthesis in a cadaver model with static measurement of post-cam stresses are very similar.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 62%
“…Another study [23] found lateral-but not medial-pivot motion, which we observed in our control group. Hill et al [8] and others [14] observed anterior translation of the medial condyle of 4 mm in 90°, which was slightly more than the findings by Johal et al [10].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 71%
“…Most but not all [18] published kinematic results are weightbearing, making it difficult to compare our nonweightbearing findings to prior literature. Johal et al [10] observed tibiofemoral movement in 10 weightbearing and nonweightbearing Caucasian knees using MRI and found tibial internal rotation with flexion was present in both groups but was a magnitude of rotation greater and occurred earlier with weightbearing. We may have seen even larger degrees of tibial internal rotation and lateral rollback in weightbearing films, and we will investigate this further.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%