Literature DB >> 26324393

Patient-specific finite element model of the spine and spinal cord to assess the neurological impact of scoliosis correction: preliminary application on two cases with and without intraoperative neurological complications.

Juan Henao1,2,3, Carl-Éric Aubin1,2,3, Hubert Labelle2, Pierre-Jean Arnoux4,3.   

Abstract

Scoliosis is a 3D deformation of the spine and rib cage. For severe cases, surgery with spine instrumentation is required to restore a balanced spine curvature. This surgical procedure may represent a neurological risk for the patient, especially during corrective maneuvers. This study aimed to computationally simulate the surgical instrumentation maneuvers on a patient-specific biomechanical model of the spine and spinal cord to assess and predict potential damage to the spinal cord and spinal nerves. A detailed finite element model (FEM) of the spine and spinal cord of a healthy subject was used as reference geometry. The FEM was personalized to the geometry of the patient using a 3D biplanar radiographic reconstruction technique and 3D dual kriging. Step by step surgical instrumentation maneuvers were simulated in order to assess the neurological risk associated to each maneuver. The surgical simulation methodology implemented was divided into two parts. First, a global multi-body simulation was used to extract the 3D displacement of six vertebral landmarks, which were then introduced as boundary conditions into the personalized FEM in order to reproduce the surgical procedure. The results of the FEM simulation for two cases were compared to published values on spinal cord neurological functional threshold. The efficiency of the reported method was checked considering one patient with neurological complications detected during surgery and one control patient. This comparison study showed that the patient-specific hybrid model reproduced successfully the biomechanics of neurological injury during scoliosis correction maneuvers.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Scoliosis; finite element modeling; instrumentation surgery; neurological injury; spinal cord

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26324393     DOI: 10.1080/10255842.2015.1075010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Comput Methods Biomech Biomed Engin        ISSN: 1025-5842            Impact factor:   1.763


  1 in total

1.  The construction of the scoliosis 3D finite element model and the biomechanical analysis of PVCR orthopaedy.

Authors:  Xuanhuang Chen; Hanhua Cai; Guodong Zhang; Feng Zheng; Changfu Wu; Haibin Lin
Journal:  Saudi J Biol Sci       Date:  2019-12-12       Impact factor: 4.219

  1 in total

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