Abstract

Study Design:Anatomic cadaver study.Objective:Translaminar facet screw fixation supplements unilateral pedicle screw-rod fixation in minimally invasive transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion (TLIF). Various screw diameters, lengths, trajectories, and insertion points are used; however, they do not represent true screw trajectory. We aimed to evaluate lumbar laminar anatomy and suggest a safe and effective insertion point and trajectory during lumbar-translaminar facet screw fixation in an anatomic cadaver study.Methods:O-arm navigation simulating the true translaminar facet screw trajectory was used to evaluate L1-S1 in cadaveric spines. The inner and outer diameters, length, and trajectory of the screw pathway were measured along the trajectory from the spinous process base through the contralateral lamina, crossing the facet joint to the transverse process base using 2 starting points: cephalad one-third (1/3SL) and one-half (1/2SL) of the spinolaminar junction.Results:Using the 1/2SL starting point, the outer and inner lamina diameters did not differ significantly from L1-L5 (7.47 ± 1.38 to 6.7 ± 1.84 mm and 4.73 ± 1.04 to 3.86 ± 1.46 mm, respectively). Screw length (36.16 ± 4.02 to 49.29 ± 10.07 mm) and lateral angle increased (50.28° ± 8.78° to 60.77° ± 8.88°), but caudal angle decreased (16.19° ± 9.01° to 1.13° ± 11.31°). Lamina diameter and screw length did not differ with different starting points. L2-L3 caudal angles were lower in the 1/2SL starting point.Conclusion:A 36- to 50-mm translaminar facet screw—with 5.0-mm diameter for L1-L2 and 4.5-mm diameter for L3-L5—can be inserted at the middle of the spinolamina, especially during minimally invasive TLIF, with a 50° to 60° lateral angle relative to the spinous process, and a caudal angle of 16° to 1° relative to the spinolamina from L1-L5.

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