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Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical results of the Oxford knee. Surface arthroplasty of the tibiofemoral joint with a meniscal bearing prosthesis.

John Goodfellow, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1986 - 
- Iss: 205, pp 21-42
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TLDR
The Oxford method of knee arthroplasty is proposed as a reliable and safe alternative to more invasive prostheses in rheumatoid and osteoarthritic joints in which the disease is still limited to the articular surfaces.
Abstract
The Oxford method of knee arthroplasty replaces the femoral condyles with convex spherical metal components and relines the tibial plateaus with flat metal components. Free meniscal bearings of polyethylene, spherically concave above and flat below, lie between the fixed metal components, held in place by their geometry and ligamentous tension. Advantages of the design include: congruity of the articulating surfaces; unconstrained tibiofemoral movement; preservation of all the ligaments with facility to tension them accurately from a range of bearing thicknesses; minimal bone excision; applicability to unicondylar use. Laboratory studies showed that combined rolling and sliding at meniscofemoral and meniscotibial interfaces mimic normal joint kinematics and mechanics. One hundred twenty-five bicompartmental implants were followed for two to six years. Pain was relieved in 90%; mean flexion limit was 99 degrees and mean flexion deformity 7 degrees. Stability and alignment were recovered in nearly all joints. Six knees failed and were successfully arthrodesed (two) or converted to another prosthesis (four). Eight knees required revision to replace a dislocated bearing (five) or to recement a loose component (three). In knees with an intact anterior cruciate ligament, there were no failures and a low revision rate (4.8%). The prosthesis is proposed as a reliable and safe alternative to more invasive prostheses in rheumatoid and osteoarthritic joints in which the disease is still limited to the articular surfaces.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Fluoroscopic analysis of kinematics after posterior-cruciate-retaining knee arthroplasty

TL;DR: F fluoroscopy was used to study the kinematics of the knee in 47 patients with total knee arthroplasty and four control subjects with normal knees while performing a single-leg deep-knee bend and posterior-cruciate-retaining TKA showed a starting point posterior to the tibial midline which translated anteriorly with flexion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Computer-assisted navigation in total knee replacement: results of an initial experience in thirty-five patients.

TL;DR: It has been estimated that errors in tibial and femoral alignment of >3° occur in at least 10% of total knee arthroplasties, even when performed by experienced surgeons using mechanical alignment systems of modern design.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Oxford medial unicompartmental arthroplasty

TL;DR: In this article, the authors report the outcome of 143 knees with anteromedial osteoarthritis and normal anterior cruciate ligaments treated by unicompartmental arthroplasty using fully congruous mobile polyethylene bearings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cemented rotating-platform total knee replacement. A nine to twelve-year follow-up study.

TL;DR: After nine to twelve years of follow-up, the cemented LCS rotating-platform knee replacement was found to be performing well, with durable clinical and radiographic results.
Journal ArticleDOI

Improved Accuracy of Component Positioning with Robotic-Assisted Unicompartmental Knee Arthroplasty: Data from a Prospective, Randomized Controlled Study.

TL;DR: In this paper, a prospective, randomized, single-blinded, controlled trial was conducted to evaluate the accuracy of component positioning in unicompartmental knee arthroplasty comparing robotic-assisted and conventional implantation techniques.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Mechanics of the Knee and Prosthesis Design

TL;DR: Some principles which might guide the design of knee prostheses are deduced and it is shown that current designs transgress some of these principles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimating the survival time of knee replacement

TL;DR: A method of analysing the results of knee replacement operations, which makes it possible to estimate the annual failure rate and the proportion of implants which will survive successfully for 10 years, is applied to the post-operative data for 365 operations, using Freeman, Sheehan and Manchester prostheses.
Journal ArticleDOI

The mechanical testing of a sliding meniscus knee prosthesis.

TL;DR: A 3-component sliding meniscus knee prosthesis was tested mechanically to evaluate the direct loads and the anteroposterior and mediolateral bending moments on the prosthetic components during the loading phase on a pendulum prosthesis testing machine.
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