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General Orthopaedics

THE PREVENTIVE ROLE AGAINST ADJACENT SEGMENT DISEASE OF INTERSPINOUS PROCESS DEVICE AFTER A RIGID INSTRUMENTED LEVEL IN LUMBAR DEGENERTIVE DISEASE

International Society for Technology in Arthroplasty (ISTA) 31st Annual Congress, London, England, October 2018. Part 1.



Abstract

INTRODUCTION

The elimination of motion and disc stress produced by spinal fusion may have potential consequences beyond the index level overloading the spinal motion segments and leading to the appearance of degenerative changes. So the “topping-off” technique is a new concept instructing dynamic fixation such as interspinous process device (IPD) for the purpose of avoiding adjacent segment disease (ASD) proximal to the fusion construct.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

The study simulated spinal fusion in L4-L5, fusion combined DIAM in L3-L4. The ROM and maximum von Miss stresses were analyzed in flexion, extension, lateral bending, and torsion in response to hybrid method, compared to intact modeland fusion model.

RESULTS

The investigation revealed that decreased ROM, intradiscal stress in implanted level but a considerable increase in stresses at more upper level (L2-L3) during flexion and extension in hybrid model, comparing with the fusion model.

CONCLUSIONS

The raise of intradiscal pressure at the adjacent segment to a rigid fusion segment can be reduced when the rigid construct is augmented with an interspinous process device. However, the burden of stress over total spinal segments was still the same, the stress and ROM were just shift to supraadjacent levels.


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