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      Computational model predicts risk of spinal screw loosening in patients

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          Abstract

          Purpose

          Pedicle screw loosening is a frequent complication in lumbar spine fixation, most commonly among patients with poor bone quality. Determining patients at high risk for insufficient implant stability would allow clinicians to adapt the treatment accordingly. The aim of this study was to develop a computational model for quantitative and reliable assessment of the risk of screw loosening.

          Methods

          A cohort of patient vertebrae with diagnosed screw loosening was juxtaposed to a control group with stable fusion. Imaging data from the two cohorts were used to generate patient-specific biomechanical models of lumbar instrumented vertebral bodies. Single-level finite element models loading the screw in axial or caudo-cranial direction were generated. Further, multi-level models incorporating individualized joint loading were created.

          Results

          The simulation results indicate that there is no association between screw pull-out strength and the manifestation of implant loosening ( p = 0.8). For patient models incorporating multiple instrumented vertebrae, CT-values and stress in the bone were significantly different between loose screws and non-loose screws ( p = 0.017 and p = 0.029, for CT-values and stress, respectively). However, very high distinction ( p = 0.001) and predictability (R 2 Pseudo = 0.358, AUC = 0.85) were achieved when considering the relationship between local bone strength and the predicted stress (loading factor). Screws surrounded by bone with a loading factor higher than 25% were likely to be loose, while the chances of screw loosening were close to 0 with a loading factor below 15%.

          Conclusion

          The use of a biomechanics-based score for risk assessment of implant fixation failure might represent a paradigm shift in addressing screw loosening after spondylodesis surgery.

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          Most cited references31

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          A method for registration of 3-D shapes

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            Pedicle screw loosening: a clinically relevant complication?

            Literature studies showed a very wide range of pedicle screw loosening rates after thoracolumbar stabilization, ranging from less than 1 to 15 % in non-osteoporotic patients treated with rigid systems and even higher in osteoporotic subjects or patients treated with dynamic systems. Firstly, this paper aims to investigate how much this complication is affecting the success rate of pedicle screw fixation, in both non-osteoporotic and osteoporotic patients, and to discuss the biomechanical reasons which may be related to the variability of the rates found in the literature. The secondary aim was to summarize and discuss the published definitions and conventions about screw loosening from a clinical and radiological point of view.
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              Application of a new calibration method for a three-dimensional finite element model of a human lumbar annulus fibrosus.

              Major deficits of many finite element models of the lumbar spine are the oversimplification, assumed constellation of the material properties or the insufficiently performed calibration using experimental in vitro data. The aim of this study was, to develop a method for calibrating the two-composite structure of the annulus fibrosus, the ground substance and collagen fibers.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                European Spine Journal
                Eur Spine J
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                0940-6719
                1432-0932
                October 2022
                April 23 2022
                October 2022
                : 31
                : 10
                : 2639-2649
                Article
                10.1007/s00586-022-07187-x
                35461383
                967ba27a-7462-4f5e-8b3f-d392c16678ac
                © 2022

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

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