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Total knee arthroplasty is a successful elective orthopedic procedure with an increasing number being undertaken. Original knee arthroplasties used an all-polyethylene tibia; however, with concerns over tibial loosening, the trend moved toward the metal-backed variety. Modern designs providing more conformity and changes in manufacturing of the polyethylene make it an equivalent but cheaper option. We analyzed the medium-term outcome in 1092 patients with an all-polyethylene tibial component in their total knee arthroplasty. Twenty-six patients had further surgery on their knee for a variety of reasons. Assessing reoperation for any reason, the 7-year survival rate was 96.96% with an overall infection rate of 0.37%. Seven-year survival analysis using aseptic loosening as a criteria was 99.28%. Both the Short Form 12 physical score and Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index score significantly improved and was sustained at 7 years. Body mass did not correlate to either outcomes or complications. An all-polyethylene tibia in a total knee arthroplasty has good outcome data and high patient satisfaction with good survivorship in the medium term, coupled with potential cost-saving benefits. Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Citation

David R Selvan, Alasdair J A Santini, John S Davidson, Jill A Pope. The Medium-Term Survival Analysis of an All-Polyethylene Tibia in a Single-Series Cohort of Over 1000 Knees. The Journal of arthroplasty. 2020 Oct;35(10):2837-2842

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PMID: 32498968

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