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In vitro study of accuracy of cervical pedicle screw insertion using an electronic conductivity device (ATPS part III)
Authors:Heiko Koller  Wolfgang Hitzl  Frank Acosta  Mark Tauber  Juliane Zenner  Herbert Resch  Yasutsugu Yukawa  Oliver Meier  Rene Schmidt  Michael Mayer
Affiliation:(1) Department for Traumatology and Sport Injuries, Paracelsus Medical University Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria;(2) German Scoliosis Center, Im Kreuzfeld 4, 34537 Bad Wildungen, Germany;(3) Department of Neurological Surgery, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, USA;(4) Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Chubu Rosai Hospital, Nagoya, Japan;(5) Research Office, Biostatistics, Paracelsus Medical University Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria
Abstract:Reconstruction of the highly unstable, anteriorly decompressed cervical spine poses biomechanical challenges to current stabilization strategies, including circumferential instrumented fusion, to prevent failure. To avoid secondary posterior surgery, particularly in the elderly population, while increasing primary construct rigidity of anterior-only reconstructions, the authors introduced the concept of anterior transpedicular screw (ATPS) fixation and plating. We demonstrated its morphological feasibility, its superior biomechanical pull-out characteristics compared with vertebral body screws and the accuracy of inserting ATPS using a manual fluoroscopically assisted technique. Although accuracy was high, showing non-critical breaches in the axial and sagittal plane in 78 and 96%, further research was indicated refining technique and increasing accuracy. In light of first clinical case series, the authors analyzed the impact of using an electronic conductivity device (ECD, PediGuard) on the accuracy of ATPS insertion. As there exist only experiences in thoracolumbar surgery the versatility of the ECD was also assessed for posterior cervical pedicle screw fixation (pCPS). 30 ATPS and 30 pCPS were inserted alternately into the C3–T1 vertebra of five fresh-frozen specimen. Fluoroscopic assistance was only used for the entry point selection, pedicle tract preparation was done using the ECD. Preoperative CT scans were assessed for sclerosis at the pedicle entrance or core, and vertebrae with dense pedicles were excluded. Pre- and postoperative reconstructed CT scans were analyzed for pedicle screw positions according to a previously established grading system. Statistical analysis revealed an astonishingly high accuracy for the ATPS group with no critical screw position (0%) in axial or sagittal plane. In the pCPS group, 88.9% of screws inserted showed non-critical screw position, while 11.1% showed critical pedicle perforations. The usage of an ECD for posterior and anterior pedicle screw tract preparation with the exclusion of dense cortical pedicles was shown to be a successful and clinically sound concept with high-accuracy rates for ATPS and pCPS. In concert with fluoroscopic guidance and pedicle axis views, application of an ECD and exclusion of dense cortical pedicles might increase comfort and safety with the clinical use of pCPS. In addition, we presented a reasonable laboratory setting for the clinical introduction of an ATPS-plate system.
Keywords:Cervical pedicle screw fixation   Accuracy   Electronic conductivity device   Insertion technique   ATPS
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