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Static knee alignment is associated with the risk of unicompartmental knee cartilage defects

✍ Scribed by Neela Janakiramanan; Andrew J. Teichtahl; Anita E. Wluka; Changhai Ding; Graeme Jones; Susan R. Davis; Flavia M. Cicuttini


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
104 KB
Volume
26
Category
Article
ISSN
0736-0266

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Although knee malalignment is a risk factor for the progression of unicompartmental knee osteoarthritis (OA), it is unclear how this relationship is mediated. Cartilage defects are known to predate cartilage loss and the onset of knee OA, and it may be that knee malalignment increases the risk of unicompartmental knee cartilage defects. Knee radiographs and MRI were performed on a total of 202 subjects, 36.6% of whom had radiographic knee OA, to determine the relationship between static knee alignment and knee cartilage defects. Analyses were performed for the entire cohort, as well as for healthy and OA subgroups. For every 1Β° increase in a valgus direction, there was an associated reduced risk of the presence of cartilage defects in the medial compartment of subjects with knee OA (p = 0.02), healthy subjects (p = 0.002), and the combined (p < 0.001) group. Moreover, for every 1Β° increase in a valgus direction, there was an associated increased risk of the presence of lateral cartilage defects in the OA group (p = 0.006), although the relationship between change toward genu valgum and lateral compartment cartilage defects did not persist for the healthy group (p = 0.16). This cross‐sectional study has demonstrated that knee alignment is associated with the risk for compartment specific knee cartilage defects in both healthy and arthritic people. Given that the natural history of cartilage volume reduction appears to be predated by the presence of cartilage defects, whether knee alignment affects the longitudinal progression from cartilage defects to cartilage loss requires further examination. Β© 2007 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res 26:225–230, 2008


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## Abstract ## Purpose: To examine the changes in knee cartilage T2 values over 24 months in subjects with and without risk factors for knee osteoarthritis (OA) and their association with focal knee lesions at baseline. ## Materials and Methods: Forty‐one subjects without and 101 subjects with O