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Common radiographic indices used to measure patellar height do not consistently identify patella alta and lack interchangeability between measurements

Collin D.R. Hunter, Ameen Z. Khalil, Reece Rosenthal, Allan K. Metz, Joseph Featherall, Justin J. Ernat, Stephen K. Aoki

2024Knee Surgery Sports Traumatology Arthroscopy11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE: Abnormal patellar height has been identified as a source of aberrant mechanical functioning within the patellofemoral joint. The purpose of this study is to examine the statistical agreement among three commonly used classification methods: Blackburne-Peel (BPI), Caton-Deschamps (CDI) and Insall-Salvati (ISR), by evaluating (1) the rates of patella alta identification and (2) the ability for one index to predict another. METHODS: One hundred lateral knee radiographs were evaluated using BPI, CDI and ISR to classify each knee as patella normal, patella alta or patella baja. Linear regression analysis was performed to evaluate the relationship between each index. Conversion equations were then derived using the reported linear regression best-fit line, comparing each pair of indices. RESULTS: = 0.288). Wilcoxon Signed-Rank test between the three indices revealed no significant difference between the means of converted and original indices. CONCLUSION: Despite their significant correlations and adequate reproducibility, variability between common patellar height indices render predictions and conversions between BPI, CDI and ISR inequivalent. Users of these indices must be aware of their incongruent properties when considering application to patients in the clinical setting. Furthermore, it remains unclear which patellar height measurement technique is the correct index to use in a given knee. This study highlights the need for further investigation to create a reliable and standardised method for identifying patella height. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level IV.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePatellaWilcoxon signed-rank testOrthodonticsRadiographyLinear regressionOrthopedic surgeryReproducibilityNuclear medicineStatisticsSurgeryMathematicsMann–Whitney U testInternal medicineLower Extremity Biomechanics and PathologiesTotal Knee Arthroplasty OutcomesOsteoarthritis Treatment and Mechanisms
Common radiographic indices used to measure patellar height do not consistently identify patella alta and lack interchangeability between measurements | Litcius