Abstract

The objective of the study was to investigate the influence of bone cement, length of burr hole and bone density on pullout force and insertional screw torque of cervical spine facet screws. Both facets of 24 human cervical vertebrae were scanned for bone mineral density (BMD) and assigned to two groups for measuring of insertional screw torque and pullout strength. Maximal insertional screw torque was measured and removal of the screws was performed in displacement control (0.25 mm/s) without bone cement (PMMA), with 0.1 ml of PMMA and with the burr hole completely filled with PMMA. Screw torque was 59.1 N cm (+/-25.7 N cm), pullout force was 382.8 N (+/-140.5 N) without PMMA. Injection of 0.1 ml PMMA did not change significantly both screw torque (p=0.73) and pullout (p=0.129). Filling of the burr holes with PMMA increased significantly both screw torque (p<0.0001) and pullout force (p=0.028) when compared with injection of 0.1 ml of PMMA. A positive, moderate correlation was seen between BMD and screw torque before (r=0.501; p=0.097) and after filling with PMMA (r=0.514; p=0.088), BMD and pullout force before (r=0.441; p=0.152) and after complete filling with PMMA (r=0.673; p=0.047). The PMMA does increase both screw torque (p<0.0001) and pullout force (p=0.028) of facet screws significantly if the burr hole is filled with PMMA completely when compared with injection of 0.1 ml PMMA. Bone mineral density of the cervical facets moderately correlates with peak insertional torque and pullout force. This is true for a facet without PMMA and for a facet filled with PMMA. The length of the burr hole seems to be less important.

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