Tag Archives: Anthropometry
Gender-Specific Knee Anthropometry and Its Impact on Total Knee Implant Design
Vol 8 | Issue 2 | July-December 2022 | page: 01-04 | Pavan Soni, Parag Sancheti, Kailas Patil, Sunny Gugale, Sahil Sanghavi, Yogesh Sisodia, Obaid UI Nisar, Darshan Sonawane, Ashok Shyam
https://doi.org/10.13107/jmt.2022.v08.i02.182
Author: Pavan Soni [1], Parag Sancheti [1], Kailas Patil [1], Sunny Gugale [1], Sahil Sanghavi [1], Yogesh Sisodia [1], Obaid UI Nisar [1], Darshan Sonawane [1], Ashok Shyam [1]
[1] Department of Orthopaedics, Sancheti Institute of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Pune, Maharashtra, India.
Address of Correspondence
Dr. Darshan Sonawane,
Department of Orthopaedics, Sancheti Institute of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Pune, Maharashtra, India.
E-mail: researchsior@gmail.com
Abstract
Background: Good results after total knee replacement depend on choosing components that match the patient’s bone shape. Many implants were designed from Western measurements and can fit poorly in other populations, producing mediolateral overhang or undersizing that may cause discomfort or altered load transfer. This study reports direct intraoperative measurements from an Indian cohort to highlight common fit problems.
Methods and materials: Using a sterile calibrated caliper, standardized measurements were taken during primary total knee arthroplasty on 252 knees (May 2017–May 2020). Recorded parameters included lateral and medial femoral anteroposterior lengths, femoral mediolateral width, tibial plateau AP and ML dimensions, and patellar thickness. Every reading was double-checked by the assisting resident. Data were grouped by gender and implant system (Zimmer, Indus) and used to calculate ML/AP aspect ratios, which were then compared with the manufacturers’ size charts present in the thesis.
Results: The cohort showed a clear trend: ML/AP aspect ratio decreased as AP size increased. Smaller knees frequently faced mediolateral undercoverage with available components, while larger knees were more likely to show ML overhang. Overall, the Indus system tended to match the measured dimensions more closely than Zimmer, although some male tibial fits remained imperfect.
Conclusion: Local intraoperative anthropometry reveals predictable mismatches between Indian knee geometry and some implant offerings. Practical steps—choosing systems that better match local anatomy and adopting finer sizing, staged aspect-ratio changes, or asymmetric trays—can reduce intraoperative compromise and improve early comfort.
Keywords: Total knee replacement, Anthropometry, Aspect ratio, Implant fit, Indian population.
Introduction
Successful total knee replacement depends on restoring joint balance and geometry so the replacement behaves as close to a native knee as possible. Choosing the right component size is not a purely technical step — it shapes soft-tissue tension, patellar tracking, and how loads pass through bone and implant for years to come. When component shape or sizing does not reflect a patient’s anatomy, surgeons are forced into compromises: an implant that overhangs mediolaterally can irritate soft tissues and cause persistent discomfort, while one that is too small can expose cancellous bone and change load paths, with potential long-term consequences [1]. Historically, many common prosthesis families were developed using Western anthropometry, which may not match the body proportions seen in other populations [2, 3]. Regional measurement studies and intraoperative series therefore play a practical role — they give surgeons and manufacturers the data needed to reduce mismatch and make better sizing choices for local patients [4]. Pediatric development patterns and normative range-of-motion work also help set realistic functional goals after arthroplasty and contextualize adult dimensions for templating and expectation management [5, 6]. The present intraoperative dataset from this thesis gives direct, surgeon-facing measurements that inform component selection and suggest straightforward, affordable design changes that can reduce routine compromise in Indian patients.
Aims & Objectives
1. Record standardized intraoperative measurements of the distal femur and proximal tibia in patients undergoing primary total knee arthroplasty.
2. Calculate femoral and tibial aspect ratios and document condylar asymmetries and patellar thickness.
3. Compare patient-derived dimensions with size offerings of two implant systems used in the cohort (Zimmer and Indus).
4. Identify recurrent patterns of mismatch and outline pragmatic implications for implant selection and modest manufacturer adaptations.
Review of Literature
Anthropometric and morphometric research consistently shows that knee shape differs across ethnic groups and sexes, and those differences matter for implant fit. Several studies comparing resected bone or imaging-based knee measurements with implant dimensions reported that populations with smaller average stature often face systematic mismatch when Western-derived implants are used without adaptation [7–9]. More sophisticated three-dimensional CT analyses and intraoperative series from East and Southeast Asia have repeatedly noted a practical pattern: the mediolateral-to-anteroposterior (ML/AP) aspect ratio tends to decline as AP dimension increases. In plain terms, larger knees do not increase ML width as fast as AP length, so implants with constant aspect ratios across sizes will either overhang or under-cover depending on the surgeon’s size choice [10–12]. Sex differences add another layer: females often have relatively narrower femora for a given AP height, which raises the risk of ML overhang when selection relies on AP measures alone [13, 14]. Industry responses have included gender-targeted components, asymmetric tibial trays and finer size increments, but randomized clinical data on the functional benefits of gendered implants are mixed and patient-specific solutions remain expensive and logistically demanding [15,16]. As a practical middle path, many authors advocate collecting local intraoperative data, offering finer size gradations and designing staged aspect ratios rather than a single constant ratio across all sizes; these measures can substantially reduce intraoperative compromises without full custom workflows [17, 18]. Systematic reviews stress that some populations — including Indian cohorts — are underrepresented in global datasets and call for more locally sourced intraoperative and imaging studies to guide manufacturers and surgeons [19, 20]. The current thesis contributes to this need by providing direct intraoperative caliper measures and a head-to-head comparison with two implant systems used locally.
Materials and Methods
This is a retrospective single-center series (May 2017–May 2020) using intraoperative caliper data recorded under a standardized protocol. Institutional ethical approval and patient consent were obtained. Inclusion: adults undergoing primary cemented TKR for degenerative disease. Exclusion: revision arthroplasty, inflammatory polyarthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, significant adjacent deformities of hip/spine, skeletal immaturity, and cases requiring major augmentations. After exposure and osteophyte clearance, a calibrated sterile micro-caliper measured: femoral lateral and medial AP condylar lengths, femoral ML between epicondyles, tibial AP lengths for both plateaus, tibial ML width, and patellar AP thickness. Each measurement was independently confirmed by the assisting resident. Femoral and tibial aspect ratios calculated as (ML/AP) × 100. Data were entered into a spreadsheet and stratified by gender and implant system (Zimmer or Indus) using manufacturer tables present in the thesis. Descriptive statistics reported mean ± SD; pragmatic 95% intervals were taken as mean ± 2 SD. The emphasis was on identifying directional mismatches between patient anatomy and implant sizes rather than on formal hypothesis testing. Interobserver checks were performed during data collection as described in the thesis.
Results
252 knees met inclusion criteria: 176 received Zimmer components and 76 received Indus components. Mean cohort age was 62 years (SD 7; range 42–85). Aggregate means (SD): femoral AP lateral 52.85 mm (5.71), femoral AP medial 49.87 mm (5.82), femoral ML 68.75 mm (5.35); tibial AP lateral 49.28 mm (4.77), tibial AP medial 49.62 mm (4.96), tibial ML 69.79 mm (5.61); patellar AP 33.75 mm (2.45). Medium and large implant sizes predominated. Comparison to manufacturer size charts revealed consistent patterns: smaller femora tended to be undercovered mediolaterally with available components, while larger femora more often produced ML overhang. Aspect ratio analysis showed a negative correlation with AP dimension — in other words, ML/AP ratio decreased as AP increased. The Indus system approximated the measured dimensions more closely overall in many parameters, though some male tibial fits remained suboptimal. Detailed tables and size distributions by gender and implant are available in the thesis. No measurement-related adverse events were recorded.
Discussion
This intraoperative series brings home a pragmatic point: implant-patient geometric mismatch is often predictable and rooted in population-level anatomy rather than sporadic surgical error. The central, actionable observation is that ML/AP aspect ratio falls as AP dimension increases. When manufacturers preserve a near-constant aspect ratio across sizes, surgeons face a recurrent dilemma—prioritize AP (risk ML overhang) or prioritize ML (risk AP undersizing). Both choices have clinical implications: ML overhang can irritate soft tissues and produce anterior knee symptoms, while undersizing may expose cancellous bone and alter load transmission with theoretical consequences for wear and fixation. These issues were anticipated in earlier implant and anthropometric work, which first highlighted the mismatch problem and later recommended local data collection to guide design tweaks [1–6]. Subsequent morphometric and 3-D imaging studies reinforced the pattern of declining aspect ratios and documented consistent gender differences that make AP-driven sizing riskier in women [7–14]. Practical design responses discussed in the literature — gender-conscious geometries, asymmetric trays, and finer size increments — have shown variable clinical benefit and carry cost implications, placing them out of reach for universal adoption in many settings [15, 16]. That reality elevates the value of intermediate solutions: stage aspect ratios across size bands so larger AP sizes are designed with proportionally lower ML widths; offer narrower incremental sizing where small and medium ranges predominate; and provide asymmetric tibial trays to match plateau asymmetry. These adjustments are technically feasible, relatively low cost compared with full customization, and directly respond to the anatomical trends this and other studies documented [17–20]. Importantly, implant choice can mitigate mismatch — the dataset shows Indus components matched many local measurements better than Zimmer components, indicating that thoughtful system selection is a useful surgeon-level strategy. Surgeons should use the intraoperative numbers to guide templating and on-table decisions: prioritize ML fit when soft-tissue envelope or patellar tracking suggests overhang risk, or deliberately downsize with augmentation where AP undersizing is clinically acceptable. Limitations include the single-center retrospective design and reliance on caliper-derived two-dimensional measures rather than 3-D imaging; nevertheless, caliper measures are the practical reference at the operating table and therefore highly relevant to everyday decision-making. The thesis data thus provide concrete, local targets that manufacturers and hospitals can use to adapt inventories and pursue modest design changes likely to reduce routine compromise.
Conclusion
In this single-center intraoperative series of 252 knees, ML/AP aspect ratio decreased as AP dimension increased, producing predictable mediolateral undercoverage in smaller knees and ML overhang in larger knees when implants use constant aspect ratios. The Indus system approximated many measured dimensions more closely than Zimmer in this cohort, though male tibial fit discrepancies persisted in places. Practical steps—finer sizing increments, staged aspect ratios across size bands, and asymmetric tibial options—can reduce intraoperative compromise without requiring full custom implants. Prospective outcome studies are needed to test whether closer geometric conformity improves pain, function and implant longevity.
References
1. Blevins JL, Rao V, Chiu YF, Westrich GH. The relationship of height, weight, and obesity on implant sizing in total knee arthroplasty. In: Orthopaedic Proceedings. 2019 Oct; 101(SUPP_11):66.
2. Indelli PF, Aglietti P, Buzzi R, Baldini A. The Insall-Burstein II prosthesis: a 5- to 9-year follow-up study in osteoarthritic knees. J Arthroplasty. 2002;17(5):544–9.
3. Mandavgade MG, Deshmukh MT, Kherde MS, Ingole MS. Forecast of femur bone skeleton with anatomical parameter of Indian population.
4. Reddy KS, Kumar PD. Morphometry of proximal end of femur in population of Telangana state and its clinical application. Indian J Clin Anat Physiol. 2019; 6(1):57–60.
5. Saini UC, Bali K, Sheth B, et al. Normal development of the knee angle in healthy Indian children: a clinical study of 215 children. J Child Orthop. 2010; 4(6):579–86.
6. Central Intelligence Agency. The World Factbook. 2015.
7. Gibson T, Hameed K, Kadir M, et al. Knee pain amongst the poor and affluent in Pakistan. Br J Rheumatol. 1996 Feb; 35(2):146–9.
8. Ariff MS, Arshad AA, Johari MH, et al. The study on range of motion of hip and knee in prayer by adult Muslim males. Int Med J Malaysia. 2015; 14.
9. Roach KE, Miles TP. Normal hip and knee active range of motion: the relationship to age. Phys Ther. 1991; 71:656–65.
10. Zhang Y, Xu L, Nevitt MC, et al. Comparison of prevalence of knee osteoarthritis between elderly Chinese in Beijing and whites in the United States: The Beijing Osteoarthritis Study. Arthritis Rheum. 2001 Sep; 44(9):2065–71.
11. Vaidya SV, Ranawat CS, Aroojis A, Laud NS. Anthropometric measurements to design total knee prostheses for the Indian population. J Arthroplasty. 2000; 15(1):79–85.
12. Hitt K, Shurman JR, Greene K, McCarthy J, Moskal J, Hoeman T, Mont MA. Anthropometric measurements of the human knee: correlation to sizing of current knee arthroplasty systems. JBJS. 2003; 85(suppl_4):115–22.
13. Barroso MP, Arezes PM, da Costa LG, Miguel AS. Anthropometric study of Portuguese workers. Int J Ind Ergon. 2005; 35(5):401–10.
14. Choi KN, Gopinathan P, Han SH, Han CW. Morphometry of the proximal tibia to design the tibial component of total knee arthroplasty for the Korean population. Knee. 2007; 14:295–300.
15. Cheng FB, Ji XF, Lai Y, et al. Three dimensional morphometry of the knee to design total knee arthroplasty for Chinese population. Knee. 2009; 16(5):341–7.
16. Chaichankul C, Tanavalee A, Itiravivong P. Anthropometric measurements of knee joints in Thai population: correlation to sizing of current knee prostheses. Knee. 2011; 18(1):5–10.
17. Yue B, Varadarajan KM, Ai S, Tang T, Rubash HE, Li G. Differences of knee anthropometry between Chinese and white men and women. J Arthroplasty. 2011; 26(1):124–30.
18. Ho WP, Cheng CK, Liau JJ. Morphometrical measurements of resected surface of femurs in Chinese knees: correlation to sizing of current femoral implants. Knee. 2006;13(1):12–4.
19. Chin PL, Tey TT, Ibrahim MY, Chia SL, Yeo SJ, Lo NN. Intraoperative morphometric study of gender differences in Asian femurs. J Arthroplasty. 2011; 26(7):984–8.
20. Kim TK, Phillips M, Bhandari M, Watson J, Malhotra R. What differences in morphologic features of the knee exist among patients of various races? A systematic review. Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2017; 475(1):170–82.
| How to Cite this Article: Soni P, Sancheti P, Patil K, Gugale S, Sanghavi S, Sisodia Y, UI Nisar O, Sonawane D, Shyam A. Gender-Specific Knee Anthropometry and Its Impact on Total Knee Implant Design. Journal of Medical Thesis. 2022 July-December; 8(2):1-4. |
Institute Where Research was Conducted: Department of Orthopaedics, Sancheti Institute of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Shivajinagar, Pune, Maharashtra, India.
University Affiliation: MUHS, Nashik, Maharashtra, India.
Year of Acceptance of Thesis: 2020
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Tailoring Total Knee Prostheses to Indian Anatomy: A Hypothesis on Improved Fit, Function, and Longevity
Vol 8 | Issue 2 | July-December 2022 | page: 16-20 | Pavan Soni, Parag Sancheti, Kailas Patil, Sunny Gugale, Sahil Sanghavi, Yogesh Sisodia, Obaid UI Nisar, Darshan Sonawane, Ashok Shya
https://doi.org/10.13107/jmt.2022.v08.i02.190
Author: Pavan Soni [1], Parag Sancheti [1], Kailas Patil [1], Sunny Gugale [1], Sahil Sanghavi [1], Yogesh Sisodia [1], Obaid UI Nisar [1], Darshan Sonawane [1], Ashok Shyam [1]
[1] Department of Orthopaedics, Sancheti Institute of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Pune, Maharashtra, India.
Address of Correspondence
Dr. Darshan Sonawane,
Department of Orthopaedics, Sancheti Institute of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Pune, Maharashtra, India.
E-mail: researchsior@gmail.com
Abstract
Background: Total knee replacement reliably relieves pain and restores mobility, but successful outcomes depend on how well implanted components match native bone geometry. Small differences between implant footprints and patient anatomy—particularly between mediolateral width and anteroposterior depth—can cause component overhang or under-coverage. Even millimetre-scale mismatches may irritate surrounding soft tissues, disrupt patellar tracking and reduce comfort during activities such as squatting, kneeling and rising from the floor. These practical, often subtle mismatches matter most in communities where deep-flexion activities are a routine part of daily life.
Hypothesis: We propose that knees in the studied Indian cohort show consistent differences in ML/AP relationships compared with the dimensional ladders used by many common implant systems. When sizing is guided mainly by AP measures, these differences will produce frequent ML under-coverage in smaller components and ML overhang in larger ones. Sex-based morphology is expected to amplify mismatch in women, while implants developed with regional anthropometry in mind should demonstrate closer fit and reduce intraoperative compromise. Better geometric concordance should lessen soft-tissue irritation and improve early function.
Clinical importance: Understanding local knee anthropometry enables surgeons to make pragmatic intraoperative choices and helps hospitals stock implants that reduce the need for compromise. By deliberately assessing ML coverage during trialling and keeping options such as asymmetric trays, finer size increments or augmentation strategies available, surgical teams can decrease soft-tissue irritation and better meet patients’ functional expectations. Thoughtful inventory planning informed by local data can shorten operative time, reduce waste and improve patient satisfaction without large additional cost.
Future research: Future research should focus on linking the small, millimetre-level mismatches we measure in the operating room to how patients actually feel and function afterwards. That means prospective studies that collect validated patient-reported outcomes and objective measures (range of motion, kneeling comfort, and return to daily activities) alongside the morphometric data. Randomized or registry-based comparisons of regionally adapted implants versus standard systems — with parallel cost-effectiveness analyses — will show whether better geometric fit produces real-world benefits.
Keywords: Total knee arthroplasty, Anthropometry, Implant sizing, Mediolateral overhang, Patellofemoral mechanics
Background
Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) has transformed the care of end-stage knee arthritis by reliably reducing pain and restoring mobility for large numbers of patients worldwide. Early implant designs offered limited sizing and geometry choices and were modeled largely on Western anthropometry, but as surgeons began to apply these implants across diverse populations they noted recurring mismatches between implant footprints and native bone geometry. Awareness of those mismatches prompted systematic anthropometric work to quantify the problem and to propose design or selection remedies. [1]
Anthropometric mismatch matters because small differences in component shape and size can have outsized clinical effects. Mediolateral (ML) overhang beyond a few millimetres can impinge soft tissues, provoke localized pain, and disrupt patellar tracking; conversely, under-coverage exposes cancellous bone, changes load distribution, and may accelerate wear or bone remodelling. Early morphometric studies therefore focused on basic planar measures — femoral ML and AP dimensions, tibial ML and AP widths, patellar thickness — and their derived aspect ratios, since these numbers directly inform tray footprints and femoral component geometry. [2]
Subsequent studies emphasized that population and sex differences are real and clinically relevant. Investigations from East and Southeast Asia documented smaller absolute dimensions and distinct ML/AP relationships compared with Western cohorts, prompting calls for population-tuned sizing ladders or gender-specific options. [3–6] Three-dimensional imaging and intraoperative series reinforced that the knee’s shape does not scale linearly with size: aspect ratios change across the size spectrum in ways that a fixed implant aspect ratio cannot mirror. [5,7] These findings were replicated across Chinese, Korean, Thai and Middle Eastern series, producing a consistent message — modern implants must either accept some degree of anatomical compromise or evolve to offer finer gradations and asymmetric options. [4–9]
Gender differences add another layer. Multiple investigators documented systematic differences in femoral morphology between men and women — females often present with relatively narrower ML widths for similar AP dimensions — introducing a risk of overhang if AP dimension alone dictates sizing. This observation led some manufacturers to introduce gender-targeted components; however, clinical trials and meta-analyses have produced mixed evidence on whether gender-specific designs yield meaningful outcome advantages. [10–13]
Practical implications go beyond pure geometry. In many Asian populations, functional expectations include deep flexion activities such as kneeling, squatting and floor seating; implants that seem adequate on standard radiographs may still fail to meet these real-world demands if they alter patellofemoral mechanics or introduce soft-tissue irritation. Thus, anthropometric mismatch influences not only implant survival but also patient satisfaction and day-to-day function. [6, 11]
Industry responses have varied: some companies refined sizing increments, introduced asymmetric tibial trays, or marketed gender-specific lines; others continued with broad, conservative ladders and advocated surgical techniques to adapt standard components. Comparative inventories and in-hospital stocking strategies increasingly rely on local anthropometric evidence to minimize intraoperative compromise. Large registry and international surveys underscored the heterogeneity of practice and the potential value of region-specific data to guide procurement and surgical planning. [14–16]
Taken together, the literature supports a practical, surgeon-centred approach: measure and understand local anthropometry, maintain flexible inventories that contain sizes and geometries suited to the served population, and apply intraoperative judgement when templating and trialling components. This body of work also sets a research expectation: to move from descriptive morphometry to prospective studies that link millimetre-scale mismatch to validated patient-reported outcomes and objective function. [17–19]
Hypothesis
Primary hypothesis
the anatomic dimensions of the knees in the studied Indian cohort will show systematic differences from those encoded in commonly used implant size ladders, producing predictable ML under-coverage in smaller components and ML overhang in larger ones when AP dimension alone dictates size selection. This mismatch is expected to be measurable and frequent enough to warrant reconsideration of inventory and sizing strategy. [1–4]
Mechanistic rationale
Implant manufacturers historically optimized designs around datasets that reflect specific populations; consequently, many widely used systems embed implicit assumptions about aspect-ratio trajectories across sizes. If those assumptions differ from the true, continuous distribution of patient anatomy in a different population, AP-based sizing will create ML discordance. The resulting geometric mismatch perturbs soft tissues, modifies patellofemoral relationships, and alters load transfer — plausible mechanistic pathways that can produce pain, impaired function and possibly altered wear behaviour. [2, 5, 7]
Secondary hypotheses
1. Sex differences will amplify mismatch patterns. For comparable AP dimensions, female knees will frequently show narrower ML widths (or different aspect ratios) than male knees; when implants are scaled by AP alone this will produce systematic overhang or edge prominence in females, consistent with prior comparative morphometry studies. [10–13]
2. Regional or locally manufactured implant systems that were designed with regional anatomy in mind will demonstrate closer dimensional concordance with the cohort than systems developed primarily from Western datasets; if true, privileging such systems in stock selection could reduce intraoperative compromise. [3,14]
3. Even millimetre-scale mismatches will be clinically meaningful: ML overhang exceeding commonly-cited thresholds (≈3 mm) will be frequent enough to influence postoperative comfort and early function, justifying changes to sizing practice and inventory policy. [18,19]
Operational implications of the hypotheses
If these hypotheses hold, several straightforward actions follow. Surgeons should not rely solely on AP templating but should routinely verify ML fit during trialling and be prepared to alter strategy (downsizing, alternate geometry, or modular options). Hospitals should base implant procurement on local anthropometric evidence, emphasizing implant systems and size ranges that reduce the need for intraoperative trade-offs. Finally, manufacturers should consider region-aware sizing ladders, asymmetric tibial trays and finer size increments to better match real anatomy. Together, these steps would be expected to reduce immediate postoperative soft-tissue irritation and potentially improve patient satisfaction for activities that demand deep flexion. [14–17]
Discussion
The aggregate literature and clinical experience show a persistent and practical problem: implants do not perfectly match human knees, and mismatch has predictable forms tied to population and sex differences. When AP measurement is prioritized, the implant ML dimension becomes the critical variable determining fit — and if the implant aspect-ratio curve diverges from the patient’s, overhang or under-coverage results. That phenomenon explains why surgeons in diverse regions routinely report the same set of intraoperative dilemmas: choosing between AP-matched components that overhang ML, or ML-matched options that create AP mismatch with risks of anterior notching or altered flexion space. [2, 5, 7]
Regional series repeatedly highlight smaller absolute dimensions and different aspect-ratio trends in Asian populations relative to Western datasets, and some local implant designs attempt to close that gap. Evidence shows that locally-tuned systems may fit better in specific subgroups, but the relationship between improved geometric fit and long-term clinical benefit is not definitively proven — randomized, long-term, comparative outcome studies remain scarce. Meanwhile, meta-analyses suggest that gender-specific designs do not consistently confer superior outcomes, underscoring that geometry alone is not the only determinant of success. Other variables — surgical technique, alignment philosophies, soft-tissue balancing, and rehabilitation — remain critical. [11–13, 14]
From a pragmatic standpoint, these insights shape three domains of action. First, the surgeon’s intraoperative algorithm should explicitly consider ML coverage as a decision point: accept minor ML mismatch only after weighing its likely impact on soft tissues and patellar mechanics, and use available technical options (downsizing with posterior augmentation, alternate trays, asymmetric options) when mismatch threatens function. Second, hospital procurement should be guided by local anthropometry: stocking implants that have demonstrated closer local fit reduces the frequency of unfavorable trade-offs and may improve operating efficiency. Third, industry should be encouraged to provide finer size increments and asymmetric tibial trays where feasible; modern manufacturing techniques make such options increasingly practical, though economic analyses are required. [14–17, 20]
Limitations and perspectives
while morphometric mismatch is well described, translating tight geometric concordance into consistent, measurable patient benefit requires prospective outcome data. Several observational studies link ML overhang to early soft-tissue complaints, but confounding variables and the multifactorial nature of postoperative pain complicate causal inference. Large-scale registries and randomized trials that pair geometric data with validated patient-reported outcome measures and long-term survivorship would provide the strongest evidence to motivate industry-level redesign. [18–21]
Finally, cultural and functional context matters. In populations where deep flexion and kneeling are essential for daily life, small geometric mismatches can disproportionally affect perceived outcome even if implant survival is acceptable. Surgeons and policy makers should therefore weigh local functional expectations when assessing the value of design modifications or inventory changes. [6, 12, 16]
Clinical importance
Understanding local knee anthropometry directly affects patient care. Appropriate implant selection and intraoperative sizing reduce the risk of soft-tissue irritation, patellofemoral maltracking and discomfort during culturally important activities like squatting and kneeling. For surgical teams, anthropometry informs operative choices (size selection, re-cutting strategy, choice of asymmetric or modular components) and inventory planning. For hospitals and purchasers, stocking implants that better mirror local anatomy can decrease intraoperative compromises, improve patient satisfaction, and potentially shorten revision risk related to early mechanical irritation. These considerations combine patient comfort, functional expectations and health-economics into a persuasive argument for region-aware practice.
Future directions
Future work must prospectively link millimetre-scale geometric mismatch to validated patient-reported outcomes and objective function, ideally through randomized or registry-based studies. Comparative trials of locally-tuned versus standard implants, paired with cost-effectiveness analyses, will clarify whether design refinements justify higher procurement costs. Exploration of modular and patient-matched manufacturing methods may offer scalable solutions, but their adoption should follow evidence of functional and economic advantage.
Conclusion
Knee anthropometry varies by population and sex, and those variations produce predictable implant-bone mismatches when AP-driven sizing is used without attention to ML coverage. The practical consequence is a set of intraoperative decisions that directly influence early comfort and long-term function, particularly in populations that demand deep flexion. Surgeons and hospitals should use local anthropometric evidence to guide implant selection, maintain flexible inventories, and apply intraoperative strategies that prioritize both geometric fit and biomechanical function. Manufacturers should consider regionally informed sizing ladders and asymmetric options; most importantly, the community needs prospective outcome studies to link geometric concordance to clinically meaningful benefits.
References
1. Vaidya SV, Ranawat CS, Aroojis A, Laud NS. Anthropometric measurements to design total knee prostheses for the Indian population. J Arthroplasty. 2000; 15(1):79–85.
2. Hitt K, Shurman JR, Greene K, McCarthy J, Moskal J, Hoeman T, Mont MA. Anthropometric measurements of the human knee: correlation to the sizing of current knee arthroplasty systems. J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2003; 85(suppl_4):115–22.
3. Barroso MP, Arezes PM, da Costa LG, Miguel AS. Anthropometric study of Portuguese workers. Int J Ind Ergon. 2005; 35(5):401–10.
4. Dai S, Surendran S. Morphometry of the proximal tibia to design the tibial component of total knee arthroplasty for the Korean population. The Knee. 2007; 14:295–300.
5. Cheng FB, Ji XF, Lai Y, Feng JC, Zheng WX, Sun YF, Fu YW, Li YQ. Three-dimensional morphometry of the knee to design the total knee arthroplasty for Chinese population. The Knee. 2009; 16(5):341–7.
6. Chaichankul C, Tanavalee A, Itiravivong P. Anthropometric measurements of knee joints in Thai population: correlation to the sizing of current knee prostheses. The Knee. 2009; 18(1):5–10.
7. Yue B, Varadarajan KM, Ai S, Tang T, Rubash HE, Li G. Differences of knee anthropometry between Chinese and white men and women. J Arthroplasty. 2011; 26(1):124–30.
8. Chin PL, Tey TT, Ibrahim MY, Chia SL, Yeo SJ, Lo NN. Intraoperative morphometric study of gender differences in Asian femurs. J Arthroplasty. 2011;26(7):984–8.
9. Ha CW, Na SE. The correctness of fit of current total knee prostheses compared with intra-operative anthropometric measurements in Korean knees. J Bone Joint Surg Br. 2012; 94(5):638–41.
10. Kurtz SM, Ong KL, Lau E, Widmer M, Maravic M, Gómez-Barrena E, et al. International survey of primary and revision total knee replacement. Int Orthop. 2011; 35(12):1783–9.
11. Cheng T, Zhu C, Wang J, Cheng M, Peng X, Wang Q, Zhang X. No clinical benefit of gender-specific total knee arthroplasty: systematic review and meta-analysis. Acta Orthop. 2014; 85(4):415–21.
12. Al-Arfaj AS, Alballa SR, Al-Saleh SS, et al. Knee osteoarthritis in Al-Qaseem, Saudi Arabia. Saudi Med J. 2003; 24(3):291.
13. Hafez MA, Sheikhedrees SM, Saweeres ES. Anthropometry of Arabian arthritic knees: comparison to other ethnic groups and implant dimensions. J Arthroplasty. 2016; 31(5):1109–16.
14. Kim TK, Phillips M, Bhandari M, Watson J, Malhotra R. What differences in morphologic features of the knee exist among patients of various races? A systematic review. Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2017; 475(1):170–82.
15. Fan L, Xu T, Li X, Zan P, Li G. Morphologic features of the distal femur and tibial plateau in Southeastern Chinese population: a cross-sectional study. Medicine (Baltimore). 2017; 96(46).
16. Rahmadian R, Rachman S, Putra FD, Wijaya R. Knee Anthropometry Using MRI and Its Suitability with Three Implant Brands in Semen Padang Hospital Indonesia. (2019).
17. Karimi E, Zandi R, Norouzian M, Birjandinejad A. Correlation of anthropometric measurements of proximal tibia in Iranian knees with size of current tibial implants. Arch Bone Jt Surg. 2019; 7(4):339.
18. McArthur J, Makrides P, Thangarajah T, Brooks S. Tibial component overhang in total knee replacement: incidence and functional outcomes. Acta Orthop Belg. 2012; 78(2):199–202.
19. Zalzal P, Backstein D, Gross AE, Papini M. Notching of the anterior femoral cortex during total knee arthroplasty: characteristics that increase local stresses. J Arthroplasty. 2006; 21(5):737–43.
20. Insall JN, Binazzi R, Soudry M, Mestriner LA. Total knee arthroplasty. Clin Orthop Relat Res. 1985 ;( 192):13–22.
21. Hungerford DS, Krackow KA. Total joint arthroplasty of the knee. Clin Orthop Relat Res. 1985 ;( 192):23.
| How to Cite this Article: Soni P, Sancheti P, Patil K, Gugale S, Sanghavi S, Sisodia Y, Nisar OUI, Sonawane D, Shyam A. Tailoring Total Knee Prostheses to Indian Anatomy: A Hypothesis on Improved Fit, Function, and Longevity. Journal of Medical Thesis. 2022 July-December; 08(2):16-20. |
Institute Where Research was Conducted: Department of Orthopaedics, Sancheti Institute of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Shivajinagar, Pune, Maharashtra, India.
University Affiliation: MUHS, Nashik, Maharashtra, India.
Year of Acceptance of Thesis: 2020
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