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. 2012 Dec;19(6):843-5.
doi: 10.1016/j.knee.2012.03.017. Epub 2012 Jun 7.

The Posterior Condylar Offset Ratio

Affiliations

The Posterior Condylar Offset Ratio

Parm Johal et al. Knee. 2012 Dec.

Abstract

Introduction: Posterior Condylar Offset is an area of interest in knee arthroplasty research and clinical outcome. The aim of the study is to define a quantifiable Posterior Condylar Offset Ratio, a normal value for this ratio and to confirm its reproducibility on pre-operative radiographs.

Method: We propose a new Posterior Condylar Offset Ratio which is defined as the maximal thickness of the posterior condyle projecting posteriorly to a straight line drawn as the extension of the posterior femoral shaft cortex, divided by the maximal thickness of the posterior condyle projecting posterior to a straight line drawn as the extension of the anterior femoral shaft cortex on a true lateral radiograph of the distal quarter of the femur. We have measured this on 100 true lateral radiographs (50 females, 50 males, and mean age 65 years).

Results: The mean ratio was 0.44 (SD 0.02) and was shown to have good reproducibility (intra-observer error 0.899 and inter-observer error 0.882. The ratio was also very consistent between male and female patients (0.44 (SD 0.02) for the males and 0.45 (SD 0.02) for the females). Adjusting the ratio for reported posterior condyle articular cartilage thickness increased the ratio to 0.47 (SD 0.02).

Conclusion: We suggest our Posterior Condylar Offset Ratio is a useful tool to aid further research in this area of knee arthroplasty and propose a normal value of 0.44 on radiographs and 0.47 on post-operative knee arthroplasty radiographs.

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