1. Medial cortical bone thickness of the tibial diaphysis in osteoarthritis is related to lower extremity alignment and tibial morphology.
- Author
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Maeda, Keisuke, Mochizuki, Tomoharu, Tanifuji, Osamu, Katsumi, Ryota, Kobayashi, Koichi, and Kawashima, Hiroyuki
- Subjects
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KNEE osteoarthritis , *STATISTICAL correlation , *LEG , *THREE-dimensional imaging , *COMPACT bone , *BONE shafts , *COMPUTED tomography , *TIBIA , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *RESEARCH , *COMPARATIVE studies ,FEMUR radiography ,LEG radiography - Abstract
Background: The purpose of this study was to clarify (1) the differences in cortical bone thickness (CBT) of the tibial diaphysis between healthy and osteoarthritic knees and (2) the influences of the femorotibial angle (FTA) and inclination of the medial compartment of the proximal tibia (MCT) on tibial CBT. Methods: The study assessed 60 subjects with varus knee osteoarthritis (OA) (22 males and 38 females; mean age, 74 ± 7 years) and 53 healthy elderly subjects (28 males and 25 females; mean age, 70 ± 6 years). Three-dimensional estimated CBT of the tibial diaphysis was automatically calculated for 2752–11,296 points using high-resolution measurements from CT. The standardized CBT was assessed in 24 regions by combining six heights and four areas. Additionally, the association between the CBT, each FTA, and MCT inclination was investigated. Results: The OA group showed a thicker CBT in the medial areas than in the lateral areas of the proximal tibia, while the healthy group had a thicker lateral CBT. The medial-to-lateral ratio of the proximal tibia was significantly higher in the OA group than in the healthy group. The proximal-medial CBT correlated with FTA and MCT inclinations in the OA group. Conclusions: This study demonstrated that varus osteoarthritic knees showed a different trend of proximal-medial CBT with associations in FTA and MCT inclination from healthy knees, possibly due to medial load concentration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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