Abstract

Purpose. Anterior plate fixation has been reported to provide satisfactory results in cervical spine distractive flexion (DF) injuries stages 1 and 2, but will result in a substantial failure rate in more unstable stage 3 and above. The aim of this investigation was to determine the biomechanical properties of different fixation techniques in a DF-3 injury model where all structures responsible for the posterior tension band mechanism are torn.Methods. The multidirectional three-dimensional stiffness of the subaxial cervical spine was measured in eight cadaveric specimens with a simulated DF-3 injury at C5–C6, stabilized with four different fixation techniques: anterior plate alone, anterior plate combined with posterior wire, transarticular facet screws, and a pedicle screw–rod construct, respectively.Results. The anterior plate alone did not improve stability compared to the intact spine condition, thus allowing considerable range of motion around all three cardinal axes (p > 0.05). The anterior plate combined with posterior wire technique improved flexion–extension stiffness (p = 0.023), but not in axial rotation and lateral bending. When the anterior plate was combined with transarticular facet screws or with a pedicle screws–rod instrumentation, the stability improved in flexion–extension, lateral bending, and in axial rotation (p < 0.05).Conclusions. These findings imply that the use of anterior fixation alone is insufficient for fixation of the highly unstable DF-3 injury. In these situations, the use of anterior fixation combined with a competent posterior tension band reconstruction (e.g. transarticular screws or a posterior pedicle screws–rod device) improves segmental stability.

Highlights

  • Distractive flexion stage 3 injury (DF-3) of the cervical spine is characterized by rupture of the posterior soft tissue elements causing instability in flexion [1]

  • Using an in vitro human cadaveric cervical spine model with distractive–flexion stage 3 injury at C5–C6, the present study aims to quantify the multidirectional stability provided by four different reconstruction techniques: anterior plate fixation alone (A), and combined with one of three posterior fixation techniques—triple wire technique [24] (AW), transarticular facet joint screws [25] (AT), or a posterior pedicle screw–rod device (AP)

  • A = anterior plate alone; a pedicle screw construct (AP) = anterior plate combined with pedicle-screw construct; Anterior plate–transarticular facet screws (AT) = anterior plate combined with posterior transarticular facet screws; Anterior plate–wire (AW) = anterior plate combined with posterior wire

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Summary

Introduction

Distractive flexion stage 3 injury (DF-3) of the cervical spine is characterized by rupture of the posterior soft tissue elements causing instability in flexion [1]. Both facet joints are dislocated, and there is a translational deformity not exceeding 50% (Figure 1). When the posterior annulus is ruptured, disk fragments may shift into the spinal canal when the facet joints are reduced [3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. The anterior approach leaves the patient with less pain and stiffness [10], and provides acceptable clinical outcomes [11].

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