Unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) is an effective treatment for anteromedial osteoarthritis in carefully selected patients. Increasing attention has recently been directed toward restoration of pre-arthritic coronal alignment, supported by the use of the arithmetic hip–knee–ankle angle (aHKA) to estimate constitutional lower limb alignment. In medial UKA, kinematic alignment principles derived from the original technique described by Cartier et al. may help to reproduce native joint-line orientation while preserving physiological soft-tissue balance. This technical note details the indications, preoperative assessment, planning strategy, and operative steps of the procedure. Preoperative long-leg weight-bearing radiographs are used to estimate constitutional alignment through the aHKA and to plan the coronal inclination of the tibial cut. Intraoperatively, the distal position of the extramedullary guide is reproduced according to the preoperative planning in order to restore the native inclination of the medial tibial plateau. The sagittal tibial cut, posterior tibial slope, distal femoral cut, component sizing, gap assessment, and cementation technique are described, with emphasis on anatomical landmarks and technical pearls to improve reproducibility. The described technique provides a practical method for approximating constitutional coronal alignment in medial UKA without the use of robotic or navigated systems. The key feature of the procedure is accurate planning and execution of the tibial cut in both the coronal and sagittal planes in order to reproduce native joint-line orientation and preserve appropriate ligament balance.
Queirazza et al. (Thu,) studied this question.