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Biomechanical Characteristics of an Integrated Lumbar Interbody Fusion Device

INTRODUCTION: We hypothesized that an Integrated Lumbar Interbody Fusion Device (PILLAR SA, Orthofix, Lewisville, TX) will function biomechanically similar to a traditional anterior interbody spacer (PILLAR AL, Orthofix, Lewisville, TX) plus posterior instrumentation (FIREBIRD, Orthofix, Lewisville,...

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Autores principales: Voronov, Leonard I., Vastardis, Georgios, Zelenakova, Julia, Carandang, Gerard, Havey, Robert M., Waldorff, Erik I., Zindrick, Michael R., Patwardhan, Avinash G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Society for the Advancement of Spine Surgery 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4325499/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25694931
http://dx.doi.org/10.14444/1001
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author Voronov, Leonard I.
Vastardis, Georgios
Zelenakova, Julia
Carandang, Gerard
Havey, Robert M.
Waldorff, Erik I.
Zindrick, Michael R.
Patwardhan, Avinash G.
author_facet Voronov, Leonard I.
Vastardis, Georgios
Zelenakova, Julia
Carandang, Gerard
Havey, Robert M.
Waldorff, Erik I.
Zindrick, Michael R.
Patwardhan, Avinash G.
author_sort Voronov, Leonard I.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: We hypothesized that an Integrated Lumbar Interbody Fusion Device (PILLAR SA, Orthofix, Lewisville, TX) will function biomechanically similar to a traditional anterior interbody spacer (PILLAR AL, Orthofix, Lewisville, TX) plus posterior instrumentation (FIREBIRD, Orthofix, Lewisville, TX). Purpose of this study was to determine if an Integrated Interbody Fusion Device (PILLAR SA) can stabilize single motion segments as well as an anterior interbody spacer (PILLAR AL) + pedicle screw construct (FIREBIRD). METHODS: Eight cadaveric lumbar spines (age: 43.9±4.3 years) were used. Each specimen's range of motion was tested in flexion-extension (FE), lateral bending (LB), and axial rotation (AR) under intact condition, after L4-L5 PILLAR SA with intervertebral screws and after L4-L5 360° fusion (PILLAR AL + Pedicle Screws and rods (FIREBIRD). Each specimen was tested in flexion (8Nm) and extension (6Nm) without preload (0 N) and under 400N of preload, in lateral bending (±6 Nm) and axial rotation (±5 Nm) without preload. RESULTS: Integrated fusion using the PILLAR SA device demonstrated statistically significant reductions in range of motion of the L4-L5 motion segment as compared to the intact condition for each test direction. PILLAR SA reduced ROM from 8.9±1.9 to 2.9±1.1° in FE with 400N follower preload (67.4%), 8.0±1.7 to 2.5±1.1° in LB, and 2.2±1.2 to 0.7±0.3° in AR. A comparison between the PILLAR SA integrated fusion device versus 360° fusion construct with spacer and bilateral pedicle screws was statistically significant in FE and LB. The 360° fusion yielded motion of 1.0±0.5° in FE, 1.0±0.8° in LB (p0.05). CONCLUSIONS: The PILLAR SA resulted in motions of less than 3° in all modes of motion and was not as motion restricting as the traditional 360° using bilateral pedicle screws. The residual segmental motions compare very favorably with published biomechanical studies of other interbody integrated fusion devices.
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spelling pubmed-43254992015-02-18 Biomechanical Characteristics of an Integrated Lumbar Interbody Fusion Device Voronov, Leonard I. Vastardis, Georgios Zelenakova, Julia Carandang, Gerard Havey, Robert M. Waldorff, Erik I. Zindrick, Michael R. Patwardhan, Avinash G. Int J Spine Surg Article INTRODUCTION: We hypothesized that an Integrated Lumbar Interbody Fusion Device (PILLAR SA, Orthofix, Lewisville, TX) will function biomechanically similar to a traditional anterior interbody spacer (PILLAR AL, Orthofix, Lewisville, TX) plus posterior instrumentation (FIREBIRD, Orthofix, Lewisville, TX). Purpose of this study was to determine if an Integrated Interbody Fusion Device (PILLAR SA) can stabilize single motion segments as well as an anterior interbody spacer (PILLAR AL) + pedicle screw construct (FIREBIRD). METHODS: Eight cadaveric lumbar spines (age: 43.9±4.3 years) were used. Each specimen's range of motion was tested in flexion-extension (FE), lateral bending (LB), and axial rotation (AR) under intact condition, after L4-L5 PILLAR SA with intervertebral screws and after L4-L5 360° fusion (PILLAR AL + Pedicle Screws and rods (FIREBIRD). Each specimen was tested in flexion (8Nm) and extension (6Nm) without preload (0 N) and under 400N of preload, in lateral bending (±6 Nm) and axial rotation (±5 Nm) without preload. RESULTS: Integrated fusion using the PILLAR SA device demonstrated statistically significant reductions in range of motion of the L4-L5 motion segment as compared to the intact condition for each test direction. PILLAR SA reduced ROM from 8.9±1.9 to 2.9±1.1° in FE with 400N follower preload (67.4%), 8.0±1.7 to 2.5±1.1° in LB, and 2.2±1.2 to 0.7±0.3° in AR. A comparison between the PILLAR SA integrated fusion device versus 360° fusion construct with spacer and bilateral pedicle screws was statistically significant in FE and LB. The 360° fusion yielded motion of 1.0±0.5° in FE, 1.0±0.8° in LB (p0.05). CONCLUSIONS: The PILLAR SA resulted in motions of less than 3° in all modes of motion and was not as motion restricting as the traditional 360° using bilateral pedicle screws. The residual segmental motions compare very favorably with published biomechanical studies of other interbody integrated fusion devices. International Society for the Advancement of Spine Surgery 2014-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC4325499/ /pubmed/25694931 http://dx.doi.org/10.14444/1001 Text en Copyright © 2014 ISASS - International Society for the Advancement of Spine Surgery http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License, permitting all non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Voronov, Leonard I.
Vastardis, Georgios
Zelenakova, Julia
Carandang, Gerard
Havey, Robert M.
Waldorff, Erik I.
Zindrick, Michael R.
Patwardhan, Avinash G.
Biomechanical Characteristics of an Integrated Lumbar Interbody Fusion Device
title Biomechanical Characteristics of an Integrated Lumbar Interbody Fusion Device
title_full Biomechanical Characteristics of an Integrated Lumbar Interbody Fusion Device
title_fullStr Biomechanical Characteristics of an Integrated Lumbar Interbody Fusion Device
title_full_unstemmed Biomechanical Characteristics of an Integrated Lumbar Interbody Fusion Device
title_short Biomechanical Characteristics of an Integrated Lumbar Interbody Fusion Device
title_sort biomechanical characteristics of an integrated lumbar interbody fusion device
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4325499/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25694931
http://dx.doi.org/10.14444/1001
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