There are several types of ankle arthritis: inflammatory rheumatoid, traumatic, and degenerative. Some can be well
treated or at least temporized with various types of braces, orthotics, oral medications, and injections. When the pain
of the arthritis begins to interfere with a patient’s life activities, frequently surgical intervention is needed. The
main-stay of ankle arthrosis has been
joint arthrodesis, due to the moderately poor prosthetic survival of total ankle replacements. This is primarily due to the
clinical results of early ankle designs. Therefore, arthrodesis has been the only choice for many surgeons and patients. Some
patients have very good results from ankle fusion, although reports have shown that some patients eventually become limited by
pain and degenerative changes elsewhere in the foot.
TKA as the INBONE® Ankle Design Direction
Over the last 40 years total joint replacement has been used successfully in three joints: the hip, the knee, and the
shoulder. These successes came at the expense of many prosthetic failures. It was from solving the problems of those
prosthetic failures, particularly those of the total knee, that the workable principles of total joint replacement arose.
The INBONE® Total Ankle System is a third generation system and was designed with these proven principles
of total joint arthroplasty in mind.
Long Stems
In the past, ankle replacements have suffered from poor fixation, since long tibial stems could not be placed into the
ankle. In contrast to the knee, the ankle does not have the articulation range that would allow a long stem to be inserted.
And, in contrast to the hip, the ankle cannot be dislocated to allow long stem access either. The only other choice is to
put a large anterior window in the tibia so that a long stem could be dropped in. Although, the anterior window would allow
a longer stem, it weakens the tibia at the same time, thereby defeating the purpose of a long stem.
The INBONE® Total Ankle has addressed this problem by creating a patented, modular stem system. By dropping
small, interconnecting stem pieces into the joint space, a surgeon can build a long tibial stem piece by piece. So the
prosthesis gains fixation like that of knees and hips, without weakening the anterior portion of the tibia.