Biomechanics of Cervical "skip" Corpectomy Versus Standard Multilevel Corpectomy

Document Type

Article

Abstract

Copyright © 2017 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved. Study Design: In vitro biomechanical study of flexibility with finite-element simulation to estimate screw stresses. Objective: To compare cervical spinal stability after a standard plated 3-level corpectomy with stability after a plated 3-level "skip" corpectomy where the middle vertebra is left intact (ie, two 1-level corpectomies), and to quantify pullout forces acting on the screws during various loading modes. Summary of Background Data: Clinically, 3-level cervical plated corpectomy has a high rate of failure, partially because only 4 contact points affix the plate to the upper and lower intact vertebrae. Leaving the intermediate vertebral body intact for additional fixation points may overcome this problem while still allowing dural sac decompression. Methods: Quasistatic nonconstraining torque (maximum 1 N m) induced flexion, extension, lateral bending, and axial rotation while angular motion was recorded stereophotogrammetrically. Specimens were tested intact and after corpectomy with standard plated and strut-grafted 3-level corpectomy (7 specimens) or "skip" corpectomy (7 specimens). Screw stresses were quantified using a validated finite-element model of C3-C7 mimicking experimentally tested groups. Skip corpectomy with C5 screws omitted was also simulated. Results: Plated skip corpectomy tended to be more stable than plated standard corpectomy, but the difference was not significant. Compared with standard plated corpectomy, plated skip corpectomy reduced peak screw pullout force during axial rotation (mode of loading of highest peak force) by 15% (4-screw attachment) and 19% (6-screw attachment). Conclusions: Skip corpectomy is a good alternative to standard 3-level corpectomy to improve stability, especially during lateral bending. Under pure moment loading, the screws of a cervical multilevel plate experience the highest pullout forces during axial rotation. Thus, limiting this movement in patients undergoing plated multilevel corpectomy may be reasonable, especially until solid fusion is achieved.

Keywords

anterior cervical plating, biomechanics, multilevel corpectomy

Publication Date

1-1-2017

Publication Title

Clinical Spine Surgery

ISSN

23800186

E-ISSN

23800194

Volume

30

Issue

3

First Page

E152

Last Page

E161

PubMed ID

22801457

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

10.1097/BSD.0b013e318268d30a

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