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One of the principal advantages of unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA) is its conservative nature. Ideally, after a UKA, any future revision can be carried out with the use of primary total knee arthroplasty (TKA) components and the result can be comparable to a primary arthroplasty. Initial experience from the 1980s indicated that this might not be the case. As experience with primary UKA was gained, however, subsequent reports confirmed its conservative nature.
For a UKA to be conservative, it is important that surgeons follow the basic principle of performing a minimal initial tibial resection (see Chapter 6 ). By doing so, tibial augmentation methods such as modular wedges will rarely be required ( Fig. 10.1 ). When initial tibial resection has been excessive ( Fig. 10.2 ), augmentation methods and extended tibial stems will be required.
Loss of tibial bone stock following a medial UKA can also be due to subsidence of the tibial component, although osteolysis compromising tibial bone stock is rare. An example of this is shown in Fig. 10.3 . In this case, the tibial component had slowly subsided over a 20-year period. The resultant defect was significant, but was mostly contained by cortical bone and could be treated with a tibial component with a 30-mm stem extension and the use of local autogenous bone graft harvested from standard total knee bone resections.
After failed lateral UKA, loss of tibial bone stock is also rarely a problem ( Fig. 10.4 ). This is most likely because tibial bone preparation for lateral UKA is intrinsically conservative (see Chapter 8 ).
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