Abstract

BackgroundIn cervical arthroplasty, qualitative motion analysis generally investigates the position of the center of rotation (COR) before and after surgery. But is the pre-op COR suitable as reference? We believe that only a comparison against healthy individuals can answer whether a physiological motion pattern has been achieved. The aim of our study was to examine how the COR for flexion/extension after insertion of 3 biomechanically completely different types of disc prostheses compares to healthy volunteers, and whether and how prosthesis design contributes to a more natural or maybe even worse motion pattern.MethodsIn 15 healthy volunteers, MRI in flexion and in extension was taken, and the coordinates for the CORs (COR-HV) from C3 to C7 were determined. Then pre- and post-op flexion/extension x-rays from 30 patients with a one-level disc prosthesis underwent analysis for determination of COR from C3 to C7; 10 patients who received a Bryan, a Prestige STLP, or a Discover prosthesis were chosen, respectively. Change of post-op COR position was investigated in relation to the COR-HV.ResultsThe pre-operative COR is not congruent with the COR found in healthy subjects and therefore cannot be used as reference for investigation whether a disc prosthesis resembles natural motion. However, the comparison with healthy individuals shows that prosthesis insertion can change the coordinates of the COR to any direction in all levels from C3/4 to C6/7 regardless of the operated segment. Prostheses with flexible biomechanical properties can contribute to shift the COR toward normal, but devices with unphysiological biomechanical design, like fixed ball socket designs, for instance, can make the motion pattern even worse.ConclusionsEven if the small cohorts in our study do not allow strong conclusions, it seems that in cervical arthroplasty, the biomechanical concept of the prosthesis has a significant impact whether a near-physiological motion pattern can be achieved or not. As it is a rumor but not scientifically proven that prosthesis design has no influence on clinical outcome, surgeons should only choose devices with flexible biomechanical properties for disc replacement.

Highlights

  • In cervical arthroplasty, qualitative motion analysis generally investigates the position of the center of rotation (COR) before and after surgery

  • Data for C6/7 was spared from the datasets Bryan08— post-op; Discover09 pre- and post-op; Discover10 preop; Prestige05 pre-op because the necessary landmarks for biomechanical calculation could not be determined as C7 was covered from the patients’ shoulders

  • Data was spared from analysis from the datasets Bryan05–C5/6 pre-op; Bryan08–C5/6 post-op because segmental Range of motion (ROM) was below 2° and reliable calculation of the COR was not possible

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Summary

Introduction

Qualitative motion analysis generally investigates the position of the center of rotation (COR) before and after surgery. We believe that in patients with disc herniations, the COR of the affected segment is not at a physiological position anymore; investigation of qualitative motion of a disc prosthesis must compare the post-op COR against healthy volunteers rather than with the pre-op COR. This was the aim of our study, to compare pre- and post-OP COR for maximum flexion/extension from 30 patients with 3 different types of disc prostheses with 15 healthy volunteers in whom the COR was determined from flexion/extension MRI

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