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Strain behavior of malaligned cervical spine implanted with metal-on-polyethylene, metal-on-metal, and elastomeric artificial disc prostheses – A finite element analysis.

Authors :
Chen, Wen-Ming
Jin, Jie
Park, Taehyung
Ryu, Kyeong-Sik
Lee, Sung-Jae
Source :
Clinical Biomechanics. Nov2018, Vol. 59, p19-26. 8p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Abstract Background Postoperative alterations in cervical spine curvature (i.e. loss of lordotic angle) are frequently observed following total disc replacement surgery. However, it remains unclear whether such changes in lordotic angle are due to preoperative spinal deformities and/or prostheses design limitations. The objective of the study is to investigate strain and segmental biomechanics of the malaligned cervical spine following total disc replacement. Methods Three disc prostheses were chosen, namely a metal-on-polyethylene, a metal-on-metal, and an elastomeric prosthesis, which feature different geometrical and material design characteristics. All discs were modelled and implanted into multi-segmental cervical spine finite element model (C3-C7) with normal, straight and kyphotic alignments. Comparative analyses were performed by using a hybrid protocol. Findings The results indicated that as the spine loses lordotic alignment, the prosthesis with elastomeric core tends to produce significantly larger flexion range of motion (difference up to 6.1°) than metal-on-polyethylene and metal-on-metal prostheses. In contrast, when the treated spine had normal lordotic alignment, the range of motion behaviors of different prostheses are rather similar (difference within 1.9°). Large localized strains up to 84.8% were found with the elastomeric prosthesis, causing a collapsed anterior disc space under flexion loads. Interpretation Changes in cervical spinal alignments could significantly affect the surgical-level range of motion behaviors following disc arthroplasty; the in situ performance was largely dependent on the designs of the artificial disc devices in particular to the material properties. Highlights • Strains in artificial disc for malaligned cervical spines are investigated. • Observed relationship between range of motion and strained prostheses • The in situ disc performance varies as cervical spinal alignment changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02680033
Volume :
59
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Clinical Biomechanics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
132940862
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2018.08.005