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Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos Research & Education Institute Gulf Breeze, FL

Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos Research & Education Institute

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Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos Research & Education Institute Gulf Breeze, FL. Knee Cap. The patella articulates with the femur…. It’s a joint. Patella. Sulcus. Femur. To function properly any joint must be. Aligned (Straight) Congruent (fits together) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Lonnie E. Paulos, MD

Medical Director

The Andrews-Paulos

Research & Education Institute

Gulf Breeze, FL

Page 2: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Knee Cap

Page 3: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

The patella articulates with the femur….

It’s a jointPatella

Sulcus

Femur

Page 4: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

To function properly any joint must be...

Aligned (Straight)

Congruent (fits together)

Stable (norm ligaments)

Side view

Sunshine view

Page 5: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

The patella-femoral joint rarely has all three

The most common knee problem seen by doctors

Page 6: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

The majority of people have a patella-femoral joint that is either...

Mal-aligned (not straight)

Incongruent (doesn’t fit)

Too loose (weak ligaments)

Too tight (contracted ligaments)

All of the above (miserable mal-alignment)

? Mean

Page 7: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

?Malalignment

Page 8: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

• Determined by skeletal alignment. Develops from hip to foot (genetics)

• Functional alignment which requires normal muscle balance and conditioning during activities

Patella-femoral alignment is

Page 9: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

There is little or no consensus as to what constitutes malalignment or what treatment should be employed for symptomatic patients...

The result is inconsistent treatment, unpredictable outcomes and

occasionally increased symptoms

The “Maligned” Patella!

Page 10: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Anterior iliac spine

Med.Lat.

• Historically, Q angle has been measured with knee in extension

• Has never demonstrated significance

• ? Sulcus location (Patella-Sulcus alignment)

Tibial

tubercle

Page 11: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Is determined by hip, thigh, leg and foot alignment which can be measured by radiographs (CT scans) and estimated by physician examination.

Patella-Sulcus Alignment

Page 12: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Computerized Axial Tomography (CT Scan) Tubercle/Sulcus Position

• Full extension

• May identify abnormalities that reduce with flexion

• Precise measures

• Distance between tibial tubercle and trochlear sulcus

• >9 mm indicates lateralization of tibial tubercle

Page 13: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Physical ExaminationSkeletal Alignment

• Hip rotation

•Knee valgus or varus

• Knee ROM

• Patella-Sulcus angle

•Foot alignment

Page 14: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Axial Alignment

Knee valgus or varus• Lateral insertion of patella tendon

• Normal 5° valgus

Page 15: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Saggital Alignment

• Hyper-extension 3° to 5° normal

• Flexion 140° to 150° normal

Page 16: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Tubercle-Sulcus Angle

• Flexed knee Q angle

• Perpendicular to transepicondylar axis

• Patella center to tubercle

• Knee flexed 90º

• Normal = 0º, abnl > 10º lat.

Kolowich, Paulos et. al 1990 AJSM 18:359-365

Page 17: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Rotational Alignment

Hip Rotation

• Ext. rotation Int. rotation

•Hip assumes neutral position for gait so toes point forward

•Diff > 60° no external rotation => Abnormal

Hip Internal

Hip External

Page 18: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Rotational Alignment

Thigh-foot angle

• Normal = 15° ext.

• > 30° - consider surgery

Page 19: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Foot Alignment

Pronation

• Assoc. ext. tibial rotation and compensatory valgus

Page 20: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

?Incongruence

STRUCTURAL&

ARTICULAR

Page 21: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Patellofemoral Imaging

• Radiographs – AP, lateral, axial

• Computed Tomography

• Magnetic Resonance Imaging

• Helpful in evaluation, but diagnosis of subluxation or dislocation is clinical, not radiographic

Page 22: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Patellofemoral ImagingAxial Views

Laurin - 20º

Merchant - 45º• Joint congruency

• Trochlear depth• Lateral buttress

• Tilt• Subluxation

Page 23: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Patellofemoral Joint Congruence

• Femoral sulcus shape depth; lateral condylar height

• Patella shape facet size; angle

• Patella height alta; infera

Alignment Growth Congruence

“Geometric restraints”

Wyberg

Page 24: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Articular• Grade 0: healthy cartilage• Grade 1: cartilage soft spot or blisters• Grade 2: minor tears visible in the cartilage• Grade 3: deep crevices (>50% of cartilage layer)• Grade 4: exposed bone

“Chondromalacia”

Page 25: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

?Too Loose

Page 26: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Passive Laxity

Determined by

Ligament integrity

Geometry (Congruence)

Page 27: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Patellar Glide

0º Flexion

Determines

Medial/Lateral

Restraint

30º flexion

Congruence

Patellar Glide Test

3 to 4 quad glide too loose

Page 28: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Passive Patellar Tilt

Determines lateral and medial Restraints

Female + 5º = +10ºMale 0° + 5º

Tilt too loose

Page 29: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

?Too tight

• Lateral retinacular tightness – 0 or negative tilt

• Lateral patella pain• Radiographic patella tilt/overhang ±• Arthroscopic lateral tracking with

lateral patellofemoral wear ±

Lateral Patellar Compression Syndrome (LPCS)

NOT X-RAY Diagnosis!

Page 30: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Primary vs. Secondary

Lateral Trackers LPCS Time

LPCS Hypermobile-Lateral Tracker

Page 31: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

?All of the above

Page 32: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Miserable Malalignment!

Internal femoral torsion External tibial torsion• Dysplastic patella shape• Dysplastic femur sulcus T/S angle Lateral tilt Medial glide• Flat feet

Page 33: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute
Page 34: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Accurate Evaluation

Treatment?

Joint reaction force with congruence

Page 35: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Consensus Opinion

[patella-femoral maladies]

muscle strength + balance

“envelope of function” Scott Dye

function=

Page 36: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Time

“Envelope of FunctionCompensated

Compensated

Mild MajorLimb Malalignment

Excellent

Bad

Strength and

Balance

FunctionalCapacity

Over-use

Obesity

Accident

Dis-use

Page 37: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

?Surgery [Malalignment] + [Patholaxity] + [Incongruence]

Physical [Muscle condition] + [Activity modification]Therapy

Treatment

Page 38: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

1st Choice when treating P/F problems is conservative (non-surgical) treatment

Surgery

Usually

Page 39: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Typical Non-Surgical

• Neuromuscular facilitation

• Activity modification

• Weight loss

• Orthotics

• Bracing & Taping

But . . .

Page 40: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Dynamic (compensatory) Alignment

Maximum Compensation

Minimum Compensation

Page 41: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

•Patient strides forward, one leg is lifted while full weight is on the other leg. The swing leg is subjected to rotational hip compensation, mechanical alignment, and T/S angle positioning of the tibia tubercle to the femoral sulcus just prior to heel strike.

•Much like “lining up a putt” in golf, the patella is aligned with the sulcus.

•At heel strike, the femur engages the patella as the hip and femur finish rotating to the mid-point between internal and external hip rotation in order to keep the foot pointed forward during the foot-flat and toe-off phases of gait.

•The femoral sulcus is pre-positioned in its relationship to the tibial tubercle and actually engages the more passive patella. If this fails to occur, depending on the static and geometric restraints present, the patella will track lateral and spontaneously subluxate or dislocate during gait just prior to the foot-flat phase.

Page 42: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

• Quadriceps unit (mass action vector)

• PES anserine group (reduces T/S angle)

• Hip Abduction/Adduction (rotation)

Dynamic Restraints?

Page 43: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Patellofemoral Joint

Functional Rehabilitation• Isometrics• Straight leg raises• Leg presses (standing)• Cycle• Swim• Low impact jumping• Stretch cords

• Progressive step-ups (8” max)

• Increase passive hip rotation & strength!

Patella Forces

Knee Flexion Angle

Standing

Sitting

100°0°

Page 44: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Indications for Surgery

• Failure of conservative care

• Progressive P/F arthritis with pain

• Recurrent subluxations / dislocations

• Debilitating symptoms with daily activities

Page 45: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

?

Amount and type of surgery depends on the patient’s anatomy and severity

of problems

[malalignment] + [patholaxity] + [incongruence]

Page 46: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

The surgeon should choose the surgical procedure with the least risk

and highest chance of success based on patient anatomy

Not the easiest!

Page 47: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Proximal + Distal Realignment

Proximal Realignment

Lateral Release

Synovectomy/Chondroplasty

High Risk

Low Risk

Procedure selected depends on age, goals, informed consent

Page 48: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Synovectomy/Chondroplasty?

• Pain + crepitation only

• Short term symptoms

• No instability

Page 49: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

?Lateral Release

+

Page 50: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Primary Indication for Isolated Lateral Release

• Failed conservative treatment

• A negative or neutral passive patellar tilt (LPCS)

• NO or minimal instability or malalignment

Page 51: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Proximal Realignment(at the patella)

Indications

• Subluxating/dislocating patella with medial laxity

• Minimal patella alta

• Minimal malalignment

• Failure of patella to center after lateral release

• Failure to improve after lateral release (6 to 9 mos.)

+ ?

Page 52: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Proximal Realignment Procedures

Medial plication• Mini-open

• Arthroscopic

Rarely Need• VMO advancement

• MPFL reconstruction or replacement

Page 53: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

?Distal Realignment Procedures

Indications• Subluxating /

dislocating patella T/S angle >15º• Patella alta• Patella infera• Mal-alignment

(at the tibia)

+

Page 54: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Hauser Procedure

• Medial

• Posterior

Page 55: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Fulkerson Procedure

• Medial

• Anterior

Page 56: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Elmsley-Trillat Procedure• Flat cut • 5-6 cm tubercle shingle, intact

distally + med. sleeve• Rotate tubercle medially 1-1.5cm• Check tracking, tubercle sulcus

angle 0°• Fix with 2 screws A B C

Page 57: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

1990 StudyFailed vs. successful lateral release

Kolowich-Paulos

AJSM-1990

Bench Mark Study

Lateral Patella Compression Syndrome (LPCS)

Page 58: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Proximal-Distal Results256 patients

• 5 yr F/U• > 80% satisfied• < 5% recurrence rate

BUT…• Gradual symptoms @ 24 mos. >30%

esp. for extreme T/S angles

Mid-90’s

Page 59: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Severe femoral-tibial torsion

?

Page 60: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Enlightened

• Stan James, M.D.

• Robert Tiege, M.D.

• Peter Stevens, M.D.

“Torsional Limb Mal-alignment”

Bruce, Stevens

J Pediatr Orthop, Jul-Aug 2004

Tiege, Robert

Meisler, James

Am J Ortho, Feb 1995

Page 61: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

New Distal Procedure

De-Rotation high tibial osteotomy

D-HTO

Corrects significant external tibial torsion

and associated extreme T/S angle

Page 62: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

A B C

[T/F Angle] – [T/S Angle] = + 15°<

0° T/S Angle

Never Negative

Page 63: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Miserable Malalignment

• Femoral malrotation ≥ 30º• Derotational osteotomy femur

• External tibial torsion ≥ 30º• Derotational osteotomy tibia

• Supratubercular• Mid-diaphyseal (immature)

• Lateral release• ± medial ligament repair

[Int – Ext]

2

Page 64: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

2003

A crossover study was conducted of patients with dislocating patellae and significant torsional lower leg deformity who underwent a (D-HTO).

The results were compared to patients with similar alignment and dislocating patellae who underwent The Elmsley-Trillat Fulkerson (ETF) proximal-distal realignment.

Page 65: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Questionnaires1. Kujala scoring sheet

• Specific to patella-femoral joint

• Validated 1993 + 2003

• Reliability = 0.86, Consistency = 0.82

• Ceiling 19%, Floor 0%

2. The Knee and Osteoarthritis Score (KOOS)

• Patient based outcomes following TKA and osteoarthritis

3. The RAND 36-Item Health Survey (ver. 1.0)

• 8 Health concepts

Page 66: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

“Gun-sight” CAT Scan

Confirmed Torsional Alignment

Page 67: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Instrumented Treadmill

• 51 - Retro-reflective markers

• 8 - Digital motion analysis - TM cameras

• 4 - 3D force transducers

• Data low passed filtered (Butterworth dig. Filter)

• Visual 3D real time software

Page 68: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Results

Stride KinematicsGroup I Group II

Surgery Non-Surgery

Difference (SD)

Surgery Non-Surgery

Difference (SD)

pvalue

Total Stride Time (s) 0.671 0.673 -0.002 (.005)

0.665 0.680 -0.014 (.005)

0.004

Single Stance Time (s) 0.380 0.382 -0.002 (.005)

0.374 0.388 -0.014 (.005)

0.004

Double Stance Times (s) 0.144 0.147 -0.002 (.004)

0.153 0.138 0.015 (.007)

0.004

Total Limb Contact Time (s) 0.289 0.293 -0.004 (.009)

0.277 0.306 -0.028 (.011)

0.004

Shown are means and mean differences (standard deviation) of surgery-side limb minus the non-surgery side limb. The p value is from an independent samples Fisher-Pitman permutation test to allow for skewness in the difference score distributions. The double stance time value indicates which limb was forward during each period of double stance within each stride.

Near Equal Significant Non-Significant

Page 69: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Foot-External Rotation

Significant variability

Page 70: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Group II (Proximal-distal)Group I (Derotational high tibial osteotomy)

Results

Kajula and Knee and Osteoarthritis Scale Scores Preoperatively* and at Most Recent Follow-up

Evaluation

Preoperative Follow-up p Value Preoperative Follow-up p Value

p ValueGroup I vs.

Group IIFollow-up

Kajula ScoreKOOS Scores: Pain Symptoms Activities of Daily Living Sports and Recreation Quality of Life

50 + 23

54 + 2648 + 2167 + 2224 + 2417 + 19

80 + 10

85 + 1281 + 1685 + 1558 + 2862 + 24

< 0.001

< 0.001< 0.001< 0.0010.002

< 0.001

55 + 22

57 + 2249 + 1862 + 2531 + 2931 + 22

65 + 16

67 + 1862 + 1773 + 1944 + 3035 + 25

NS

NS0.020.03NSNS

0.010.0050.008NSNS

0.005

All values are mean + standard deviation. NS = not significant.*There were no significant differences at the preoperative evaluation between Group 1 and Group 2. **The between group comparisons were done using a multivariable linear regression comparing the group follow-up scores, controlling for both the preoperative scores and time to follow-up evaluation, with p values adjusted for six multiple comparisons using Hochberg’s procedure.

Page 71: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

Results

SF-36 Scores Preoperatively and at the Most Recent Follow-up Evaluation

Group 1 (Derotational high tibial osteotomy) Group 2 (Proximal-distal)

SF Factor Preoperative Follow-up P Value Preoperative Follow-up p value P valueGroup I vs.

Group IIFollow-up

Physical FunctioningRole Limitations Due to Physical HealthRole Limitations Due to Emotional ProblemsEnergy/FatigueEmotional Well-BeingSocial FunctioningPainGeneral Health

47.1 ± 25.420.8 ± 41.075.0 ± 43.955.4 ± 21.956.0 ± 19.145.8 ± 22.951.5 ± 22.534.2 ± 27.6

87.9 ± 22.4100 ± 0.0

94.4 ± 23.286.7 ± 15.188.0 ± 16.585.4 ± 14.695 ± 10.0

78.3 ± 22.4

< 0.001< 0.001

NS< 0.001< 0.001< 0.001< 0.001< 0.001

44.2 ± 30.365.4 ± 48.064.1 ± 48.660.8 ± 24.768.6 ± 20.359.6 ± 22.472.5 ± 16.451.4 ± 32.2

50.0 ± 27.178.8 ± 41.274.4 ± 44.265.8 ± 22.268.0 ± 20.965.0 ± 19.177.7 ± 13.153.4 ± 28.5

NSNSNSNSNSNSNSNS

0.0040.001NS

0.007< 0.001< 0.001< 0.0010.001

All values are mean + standard deviation. NS = not significant.*Between group comparisons were done using a multivariable linear regression comparing the follow-up scores, while controlling for the preoperative scores and time to follow-up evaluation.

Page 72: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

How much better is D-HTO vs. Tubercle Transfer?

JAW DROPPING!

Page 73: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute
Page 74: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute

In closing:Patella femoral surgery must be undertaken only with a thorough understanding of the problem, after an accurate evaluation, exhaustive conservative care and with the utmost caution.

¤

Page 75: Lonnie E. Paulos, MD Medical Director The Andrews-Paulos  Research & Education Institute