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Bionate Lumbar Disc Nucleus Prosthesis: Biomechanical Studies in Cadaveric Human Spines

[Image: see text] Design: cadaveric spine nucleus replacement study. Objective: determining Bionate 80A nucleus replacement biomechanics in cadaveric spines. Methods: in cold preserved spines, with ligaments and discs intact, and no muscles, L(3)-L(4), L(4)-L(5), and L(5)-S(1) nucleus implantation w...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Vanaclocha, Amparo, Vanaclocha, Vicente, Atienza, Carlos M., Clavel, Pablo, Jordá-Gómez, Pablo, Barrios, Carlos, Saiz-Sapena, Nieves, Vanaclocha, Leyre
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9774399/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36570209
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.2c05294
Descripción
Sumario:[Image: see text] Design: cadaveric spine nucleus replacement study. Objective: determining Bionate 80A nucleus replacement biomechanics in cadaveric spines. Methods: in cold preserved spines, with ligaments and discs intact, and no muscles, L(3)-L(4), L(4)-L(5), and L(5)-S(1) nucleus implantation was done. Differences between customized and overdimensioned implants were compared. Flexion, extension, lateral bending, and torsion were measured in the intact spine, nucleotomy, and nucleus implantation specimens. Increasing load or bending moment was applied four times at 2, 4, 6, and 8 Nm, twice in increasing mode and twice in decreasing mode. Spine motion was recorded using stereophotogrammetry. Expulsion tests: cyclic compression of 50–550 N for 50,000 cycles, increasing the load until there was extreme flexion, implant extrusion, or anatomical structure collapse. Subsidence tests were done by increasing the compression to 6000 N load. Results: nucleotomy increased the disc mobility, which remained unchanged for the adjacent upper level but increased for the lower adjacent one, particularly in lateral bending and torsion. Nucleus implantation, compared to nucleotomy, reduced disc mobility except in flexion-extension and torsion, but intact mobility was no longer recovered, with no effect on upper or lower adjacent segments. The overdimensioned implant, compared to the customized implant, provided equal or sometimes higher mobility. Lamina, facet joint, and annulus removal during nucleotomy caused more damaged than that restored by nucleus implantation. No implant extrusion was observed under compression loads of 925–1068 N as anatomical structures collapsed before. No subsidence or vertebral body fractures were observed under compression loads of 6697.8–6812.3 N. Conclusions: nucleotomized disc and L(1)-S(1) mobility increased moderately after cadaveric spine nucleus implantation compared to the intact status, partly due to operative anatomical damage. Our implant had shallow expulsion and subsidence risks.