Abstract

BackgroundThere have been numerous studies conducted to investigate the pullout force of pedicle screws in bone with different material properties. However, fewer studies have investigated the region of effect (RoE), stress distribution and contour pattern of the cancellous bone surrounding the pedicle screw.MethodsScrew pullout experiments were performed from two different foams and the corresponding reaction force was documented for the validation of a computational pedicle screw-foam model based on finite element (FE) methods. After validation, pullout simulations were performed on screw-bone models, with different bone material properties to model three different age groups (<50, 50–75 and >75 years old). At maximum pullout force, the stress distribution and average magnitude of Von Mises stress were documented in the cancellous bone along the distance beyond the outer perimeter pedicle screw. The radius and volume of the RoE were predicted based on the stress distribution.ResultsThe screw pullout strengths and the load–displacement curves were comparable between the numerical simulation and experimental tests. The stress distribution of the simulated screw-bone vertebral unit showed that the radius and volume of the RoE varied with the bone material properties. The radii were 4.73 mm, 5.06 mm and 5.4 mm for bone properties of ages >75, 75 > ages >50 and ages <50 years old, respectively, and the corresponding volumes of the RoE were 6.67 mm3, 7.35 mm3 and 8.07 mm3, respectively.ConclusionsThis study demonstrated that there existed a circular effective region surrounding the pedicle screw for stabilization and that this region was sensitive to the bone material characteristics of cancellous bone. The proper amount of injection cement for augmentation could be estimated based on the RoE in the treatment of osteoporosis patients to avoid leakage in spine surgery.

Highlights

  • There have been numerous studies conducted to investigate the pullout force of pedicle screws in bone with different material properties

  • The results show that there existed a hypothetical effective region with radius of region of effect (RoE) (Δr) and volume of RoE (VA) for the stabilization of the pedicle screw in screw-bone fixation

  • In the current study, an experimentally validated finite element (FE) screw-bone model was established for the pullout simulation study, and the region of effect was investigated for pedicle screw stabilization around the pedicle screw during a pullout procedure

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Summary

Introduction

There have been numerous studies conducted to investigate the pullout force of pedicle screws in bone with different material properties. Fewer studies have investigated the region of effect (RoE), stress distribution and contour pattern of the cancellous bone surrounding the pedicle screw. Pedicle screw fixation is a routine tool for spine stabilization, with the screw providing rigid bony secured points on internal fixation devices. It is a challenge for spine surgeons to perform pedicle screw instrumentation surgery on osteoporotic spines to prevent many potential complications, such as screw loosening, migration or back-out [3]. It has been reported that the mechanical strength of the bone-screw interface is adversely affected by low bone density in patients with osteoporosis [4,5]

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