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Biomechanical analysis of anterior instrumentation for lumbar corpectomy.

Authors :
Faro FD
White KK
Ahn JS
Oka RS
Mahar AT
Bawa M
Farnsworth CL
Garfin SR
Newton PO
Source :
Spine [Spine (Phila Pa 1976)] 2003 Nov 15; Vol. 28 (22), pp. E468-71.
Publication Year :
2003

Abstract

Study Design: In vitro biomechanical assessment of spinal stability after corpectomy reconstruction. OBJECTIVES To gain a more thorough understanding of the biomechanical properties of anterior plate versus dual rod systems used for anterior lumbar corpectomy reconstruction.<br />Summary of Background Data: Vertebral corpectomy is commonly required in the treatment of several types of spinal pathology (fracture, tumor, infection). Stabilization with strut allograft and anterior instrumentation can be accomplished with one of several anterior implant systems. These include plate systems and rod-based systems with theoretically different structural properties.<br />Methods: Two instrumentation systems, the ATL Z-plate and the Antares system, were each applied to 10 calf lumbar spines with a cortical strut graft reconstructing an L3 corpectomy defect. All spines were tested biomechanically to determine construct stiffness under physiologic loads in multiple planes and then tested in torsion to failure.<br />Results: There was greater stiffness (P < 0.05) in all directions of bending (flexion, extension, lateral bending) for the Antares dual rod construct compared to the Z-plate constructs. No significant difference was noted in either torsional testing under physiologic loads or torque to failure between the groups.<br />Conclusions: Although there was significantly greater resistance to bending with the dual rod construct, the ultimate selection of a system will require an individual analysis of implant profile, construct demand, and ease of use. Both systems provided secure initial fixation following lumbar corpectomy; however, the Antares system may increase the likelihood of graft incorporation in cases with greater instability and higher load demands.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1528-1159
Volume :
28
Issue :
22
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Spine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
14624096
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/01.BRS.0000096666.64634.79