Abstract

BACKGROUND CONTEXTTherapeutic devices for spinal disorders, such as spinal fusion cages, must be able to facilitate the maintenance and rapid recovery of spinal function. Therefore, it would be advantageous that future spinal fusion cages facilitate rapid recovery of spinal function without secondary surgery to harvest autologous bone. PURPOSEThis study investigated a novel spinal cage configuration that achieves in vivo mechanical integrity as a devise/bone complex by inducing bone that mimicked the sound trabecular bone, hierarchically and anisotropically structured trabeculae strengthened with a preferentially oriented extracellular matrix. STUDY DESIGN/SETTINGSIn vivo animal study. METHODSA cage possessing an anisotropic through-pore with a grooved substrate, that we termed “honeycomb tree structure,” was designed for guiding bone matrix orientation; it was manufactured using a laser beam powder bed fusion method through an additive manufacturing processes. The newly designed cages were implanted into sheep vertebral bodies for 8 and 16 weeks. An autologous bone was not installed in the newly designed cage. A pull-out test was performed to evaluate the mechanical integrity of the cage/bone interface. Additionally, the preferential orientation of bone matrix consisting of collagen and apatite was determined. RESULTSThe cage/host bone interface strength assessed by the maximum pull-out load for the novel cage without an autologous bone graft (3360±411 N) was significantly higher than that for the conventional cage using autologous bone (903±188 N) after only 8 weeks post-implantation. CONCLUSIONSThese results highlight the potential of this novel cage to achieve functional fusion between the cage and host bone. Our study provides insight into the design of highly functional spinal devices based on the anisotropic nature of bone. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCEThe sheep spine is similar to the human spine in its stress condition and trabecular bone architecture and is widely recognized as a useful model for the human spine. The present design may be useful as a new spinal device for humans.

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