Anterior versus Modified Combined Instrumentation for Burst Fractures of the Thoracolumbar Spine: A Biomechanical Study in Calves

Author:

Tezeren G1,Gumus C2,Bulut O1,Tukenmez M3,Oztemur Z1,Sever G1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Orthopaedics and Traumatology, Cumhuriyet University School of Medicine, Sivas, Turkey

2. Department of Radiology, Cumhuriyet University School of Medicine, Sivas, Turkey

3. Department of Orthopaedics and Traumatology, Baskent University Hospital, Konya, Turkey

Abstract

Purpose. To compare stability after anterior instrumentation alone versus modified combined anterior and posterior instrumentation for burst fractures of the thoracolumbar spine in calves. Methods. Thoracolumbar spines of 10 calves were used. An axial compression force was applied on each specimen using a material-testing machine, until there was a burst fracture at T12 or L1. Five specimens were fixed with anterior instrumentation alone, using 2 rods connected by 2 screws above and 2 screws below the fractured vertebra plus one tranverse connector. Another 5 were fixed with our modified technique of combined anterior and posterior instrumentation. This entailed one rod connected with one screw above and one screw below the fractured vertebra anteriorly, and another rod connected with one transpedicular screw above and one transpedicular screw below the fractured vertebra posteriorly. After instrumentation, the experiment was conducted again on each specimen and the compressive stiffness and vertebral height loss between the 2 groups compared. Results. The mean compressive stiffness was significantly greater after modified combined anterior and posterior instrumentation than anterior instrumentation alone (5508 vs 2888 N, p=0.0256), whereas the respective vertebral height losses were 37 and 33 mm (p=0.3808). Conclusion. Our modified technique of combined anterior and posterior instrumentation provides greater stability than traditional anterior instrumentation alone.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Surgery

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