Abstract

Loss of sagittal alignment and balance in adult spinal deformity can cause severe pain, disability and progressive neurological deficit. When conservative treatment has failed, spinal fusion using rigid instrumentation is currently the salvage treatment to stop further curve progression. However, fusion surgery is associated with high revision rates due to instrumentation failure and proximal junctional failure, especially if patients also suffer from osteoporosis. To address these drawbacks, a less rigid rod construct is proposed, which is hypothesized to provide a more gradual transition of force and load distribution over spinal segments in comparison to stiff titanium rods. In this study, the effect of variation in rod stiffness on the intradiscal pressure (IDP) of fixed spinal segments during flexion-compression loading was assessed. An ex vivo multisegment (porcine) flexion-compression spine test comparing rigid titanium rods with more flexible polycarbonate-urethane (PCU) rods was used. An increase in peak IDP was found for both the titanium and PCU instrumentation groups as compared to the uninstrumented controls. The peak IDP for the spines instrumented with the PCU rods was significantly lower in comparison to the titanium instrumentation group. These results demonstrated the differences in mechanical load transfer characteristics between PCU and titanium rod constructs when subjected to flexion-compression loading. The concept of stabilization with a less rigid rod may be an alternative to fusion with rigid instrumentation, with the aim of decreasing mechanical stress on the instrumented segments and the possible benefit of a decrease in the incidence of screw pullout.Graphical abstract

Highlights

  • Vertebral body wedging may be the result of an anterior vertebral compression fracture or gradual deformation due to creep-like mechanisms [1]

  • Inability to compensate for thoracolumbar hyperkyphosis leads to global spinal sagittal malalignment, which is the strongest driver of pain and disability [2, 4, 5]

  • The purpose of this study is to comparatively analyze the effect of spinal rod stiffness variation on intradiscal pressure (IDP) by means of PCU and titanium rod constructs subjected to dynamic flexion-compression loading

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Summary

Introduction

Vertebral body wedging may be the result of an anterior vertebral compression fracture or gradual deformation due to creep-like mechanisms [1]. Instrumented spinal fusion is regarded more as an end-stage salvage procedure only reserved for patients suffering from intractable pain, severe disability, significant pulmonary function impairment or progressive neurological deficit not amenable to conservative treatment [3, 6,7,8,9]. This implies that patients considered for surgery are in an advanced stage of the degenerative process, with frequently compromised bone quality due to osteoporosis or osteopenia and/or severe global sagittal imbalance. In patients older than 55 years the risk of PJF is close to 40%, and as many as one-third of the patients undergo early revision within 1 year [6]

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