JOA - 2026-05-01 - Journal Article
Primary Total Knee Arthroplasty in Patients Who Have Neuromuscular Disorders and Genu Recurvatum Using a Rotating-Hinge Implant: A Case Series With a Mean 4-Year Follow-Up.
da Silva AGM, Giglio PN, Fernandes DA, de Oliveira DT, da Palma IM, Araújo HRDS, Guerreiro JPF, Menegazzo CG, Gali JC, Camanho GL, Helito CP
Topics
Key Takeaway
Rotating-hinge TKA in neuromuscular genu recurvatum (mean preoperative hyperextension 33.4°) achieved a mean KSS of 72.4 and 7.7% failure rate at mean 4-year follow-up.
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Summary
This multicenter retrospective case series evaluated rotating-hinge TKA outcomes in patients with neuromuscular disorders and genu recurvatum >5° between 2015 and 2021. Twenty-six knees (poliomyelitis 40.9%, idiopathic neuropathy 31.8%, Charcot neuroarthropathy 22.8%) were assessed with KOOS, KSS, FJS, and GPE at mean 4-year follow-up. Failure rate was 7.7% (2 aseptic loosenings); mean KSS was 72.4, KOOS 74.3, and FJS 66.9.
Key Limitation
No comparative cohort with alternative implant constraint levels (e.g., posterior-stabilized or varus-valgus constrained) prevents determination of whether rotating-hinge constraint is necessary for all neuromuscular recurvatum cases or only those with the most severe deformity.
Original Abstract
BACKGROUND
Patients who have neuromuscular disorders and quadriceps muscle weakness may develop knee osteoarthritis along with progressive recurvatum deformity. Due to challenges in ligament balancing and the risk of knee hyperextension recurrence, the use of constrained implants may be required. The objective of this study was to report the mean four year clinical outcomes of patients who had neurological conditions and knee hyperextension and who underwent primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA) with a rotating-hinge implant.
METHODS
Patients who had neuromuscular disorders and gonarthrosis with recurvatum deformity and who underwent primary total knee arthroplasty using a rotating-hinge implant between 2015 and 2021 at multiple centers were reviewed retrospectively. Inclusion criteria included neurological conditions, preoperative recurvatum greater than 5°, and a follow-up period of ≥ 24 months. Demographic, clinical, and radiographic data were collected, including age, body mass index (BMI), underlying neurological disease, symptom duration, and previous surgeries. In total, 22 patients (26 knees) were included. The mean age was 60 years (range, 42 to 82), and the mean preoperative hyperextension was 33.4 ± 12.6°. The most common neurological condition was poliomyelitis (40.9%), followed by idiopathic neuropathy (31.8%), Charcot neuroarthropathy (22.8%), and sequelae of childhood meningitis (4.5%). Clinical outcomes were assessed using functional scores (Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS), Knee Society Score (KSS), Forgotten Joint Score (FJS), and Global Perceived Effect Scale (GPE)), postoperative complications, and radiographs to evaluate implant loosening and patella baja.
RESULTS
The mean functional scores were: Knee Society Score 72.4, Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score 74.3, Forgotten Joint Score 66.9, and Global Perceived Effect Scale 3.8. The failure rate was 7.7%, with two patients needing revision surgery due to aseptic loosening. Regarding complications, one intraoperative tibial shaft fracture occurred. Postoperatively, one patient developed peroneal nerve neuropraxia, and one had bilateral arthrofibrosis requiring surgical release.
CONCLUSIONS
Patients who have neuromuscular disorders and genu recurvatum can achieve favorable outcomes with rotating-hinge total knee arthroplasty, yielding good functional scores and acceptable complication and failure rates, considering the severity of the condition.