1. Medially-shifted rather than high-riding vertebral arteries preclude safe pedicle screw insertion
- Author
-
Taigo Inada, Mitsutoshi Ota, Yasushi Iijima, Junya Saito, Koshiro Kamiya, Akihiko Okawa, Masao Koda, Masashi Yamazaki, Takeo Furuya, Satoshi Maki, and Kazuhisa Takahashi
- Subjects
Male ,Medullary cavity ,Vertebral artery ,medicine.medical_treatment ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pedicle Screws ,Physiology (medical) ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Humans ,Pedicle screw ,Axis, Cervical Vertebra ,Vertebral Artery ,030222 orthopedics ,Vertebral artery injury ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Anatomy ,Middle Aged ,Cervical spine ,Spinal Fusion ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Neurology ,Spinal fusion ,Angiography ,Cervical Vertebrae ,Female ,Surgery ,Neurology (clinical) ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cervical vertebrae - Abstract
We enrolled 100 patients who underwent preoperative CT angiography before cervical spine instrumentation and investigated the morphology of the C2 pedicle from the perspective of pedicle screw (PS) trajectory using volume rendering and multiplanar reconstruction. The narrowest portion of the pedicle was identified as the pedicle isthmus. Safe C2 PS insertion was regarded to be not feasible when the height of the medullary cavity of the pedicle isthmus and/or width of the medullary cavity of the pedicle isthmus was ⩽4mm. Forty-five (22.5%) pedicles were ⩽4mm in width, and safe insertion of a PS was determined to be not feasible. Among these, seven pedicles were ⩽4mm in both height and width. The remaining 38 pedicles were ⩽4mm in width with heights >4mm. There was no pedicle with a width >4mm and height
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF