Affiliation:
1. Department of Neurosurgery, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin;
2. School of Mechanical Engineering, Vellore Institute of Technology, Chennai, India; and
3. University of Chicago, Illinois
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Spinal cord stress/strain during neck motion contributes to spinal cord dysfunction in degenerative cervical myelopathy (DCM), yet the effect of surgery on spinal cord biomechanics is unknown. It is expected that motion-preserving and fusion surgeries for DCM will have distinct effects on spinal cord biomechanics. The aim of this study was to compare changes in spinal cord biomechanics after laminectomy with fusion, laminectomy, and laminoplasty using a patient-specific finite element model (FEM) for DCM.
METHODS
A patient-specific FEM of the cervical spine and spinal cord was created using MRI from a subject with mild DCM. Multilevel laminectomy with fusion, laminectomy, and laminoplasty were simulated for DCM using the patient-specific FEM. Spinal cord von Mises stress and maximum principal strain during neck flexion-extension, lateral bending, and axial rotation were recorded. Segmental range of motion, intradiscal pressure, and capsular ligament strain were also measured. FEM outputs were calculated as a change with respect to the preoperative values and compared between the three models.
RESULTS
Across the surgical levels, spinal cord stress increased after laminectomy for neck flexion (+50%), neck extension (+37.8%), and axial rotation (+23%). Similarly, spinal cord strain increased in neck extension (+118.4%) and axial rotation (+75.1%) after laminectomy. Laminoplasty was associated with greater spinal cord stress in neck flexion (+57.4%) and increased strain in lateral bending (+56.7%) and axial rotation (+20.9%). Compared with laminectomy and laminoplasty, spinal cord biomechanics for laminectomy with fusion revealed significantly reduced median extension stress (13.7 kPa vs 9.7 kPa, p = 0.03), lateral bending strain (0.01 vs 0.007, p = 0.007), axial rotation stress (3.7 kPa vs 2.1 kPa, p = 0.04), and axial rotation strain (0.017 vs 0.009, p = 0.04).
CONCLUSIONS
Spinal cord strain decreased in neck flexion in all three models, yet spinal cord stress increased with neck flexion for laminectomy and laminoplasty. Changes in spinal cord biomechanics for laminoplasty parallel those for laminectomy with fusion except during neck flexion, lateral bending, and axial rotation. Compared with motion-preserving approaches such as laminectomy and laminoplasty, laminectomy with fusion was associated with the lowest spinal cord stress and strain in flexion-extension, lateral bending, and axial rotation of the neck.
Publisher
Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)
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