Abstract

Intervertebral fusion surgery for spinal trauma, degeneration, and deformity correction is a major vertebral reconstruction operation. For most cages, the stiffness of the cage is high enough to cause stress concentration, leading to a stress shielding effect between the vertebral bones and the cages. The stress shielding effect affects the outcome after the reconstruction surgery, easily causing damage and leading to a higher risk of reoperation. A porous structure for the spinal fusion cage can effectively reduce the stiffness to obtain more comparative strength for the surrounding tissue. In this study, an intervertebral cage with a porous gradation structure was designed for Ti64ELI alloy powders bonded by the selective laser melting (SLM) process. The medical imaging software InVesalius and 3D surface reconstruction software Geomagic Studio 12 (Raindrop Geomagic Inc., Morrisville, NC, USA) were utilized to establish the vertebra model, and ANSYS Workbench 16 (Ansys Inc., Canonsburg, PA, USA) simulation software was used to simulate the stress and strain of the motions including vertical body-weighted compression, flexion, extension, lateral bending, and rotation. The intervertebral cage with a hollow cylinder had porosity values of 80–70–60–70–80% (from center to both top side and bottom side) and had porosity values of 60–70–80 (from outside to inside). In addition, according to the contact areas between the vertebras and cages, the shape of the cages can be custom-designed. The cages underwent fatigue tests by following ASTM F2077-17. Then, mechanical property simulations of the cages were conducted for a comparison with the commercially available cages from three companies: Zimmer (Zimmer Biomet Holdings, Inc., Warsaw, IN, USA), Ulrich (Germany), and B. Braun (Germany). The results show that the stress and strain distribution of the cages are consistent with the ones of human bone, and show a uniform stress distribution, which can reduce stress concentration.

Highlights

  • Compared with the typical range of Young’s modulus and yield strength of human cortical bone and cancellous bone of 4–30 GPa and 20–193 MPa [23,25], the mechanical properties of the current selective laser melting (SLM) porous Ti64ELI samples offer highly compatible characteristics that can avoid the risk of the stress shielding effect

  • Ti64ELI SLM sample with an actual porosity of 67% presented a Young’s modulus and yield stress of about 15 GPa and 129 MPa, respectively, which are similar to the mechanical properties of human bone [44]

  • The load was serially applied by Lumbar 1 (L1) on the interbody fusion cage and by the interbody fusion cage on Lumbar 4 (L4)

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Summary

Design of Customize Interbody

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Introduction
Porous Cage Design
Stress-Relief Annealing
Mechanical Test of Porous Structure
Simulation
Gradient Porous Fusion Cage Dimensions
Annealing and Microhardness Analysis
Compression
Dynamic Test
12. Height each observation point for specimens
Simulation Results
Conclusions
Full Text
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