| Literature DB >> 35694022 |
Diogo Filipe Lino Moura1,2,3, Josué Pereira Gabriel3.
Abstract
Current scientific evidence enhances the importance of the anatomic restauration of vertebral bodies with compression fractures aiming, as with other human body joints, to obtain a biomechanic and functional spine as close as the one prior to the fracture as possible. We consider that anatomic reduction of these fractures is only completely possible using intravertebral expandable implants, restoring vertebral endplate morphology, and enabling a more adequate intervertebral disc healing. This enables avoiding disc and osteodegenerative changes to that vertebral segment and its adjacent levels, as well as the anterior overload of adjacent vertebral bodies in older adults - a consequence of post-traumatic vertebral flattening - thus minimizing the risk of adjacent vertebral fractures. The ability of vertebral body fracture reduction and height maintenance over time and its percutaneous transpedicular application make the intra-vertebral expandable implants a very attractive option for treating these fractures. The authors show the direct and indirect reduction concepts of vertebral fractures, review the biomechanics, characteristics and indications of intravertebral expandable implants and present a suggestion for updating the algorithm for the surgical treatment of vertebral compression fractures which includes the use of intravertebral expandable implants. Level of Evidence V, Expert Opinion.Entities:
Keywords: Fracture Fixation; Fractures, Compression; Prostheses and Implants; Spinal Fractures; Spine
Year: 2022 PMID: 35694022 PMCID: PMC9150872 DOI: 10.1590/1413-785220223003e245117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Ortop Bras ISSN: 1413-7852 Impact factor: 0.683
Figure 1A: Indirect fracture reduction by distraction and lordosis maneuvers performed through instrumentation in the pedicles of adjacent vertebrae. Note the reduction of posterior wall retropulsion and restoration of anterior and posterior sagittal heights of the vertebral body. However, central flattening of the upper vertebral platform persists with no complete restoration of the middle sagittal height of the vertebral body (red arrowhead); B: Direct reduction of the fracture via expandable intravertebral implants. Note the elevation of the entire upper vertebral platform (arrowhead); C: Indirect reduction and direct reduction combined. Notice how direct reducion complements the indirect reduction manouvers, allowing the total anatomical restoration of the vertebral body, that is, the reduction of the cortical ring and also of the central portion of the vertebral platforms.
Features of the two main expandable intravertebral implants currently available. Indications of each implant according to the authors’ preference.42,43
| Implant name |
| SpineJack® |
|---|---|---|
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| Cylindrical shape network (stent). Two implants by bipedicular access | Similar to a carjack with upper and lower lamellae. Two implants by bipedicular access |
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| Chromium-cobalt | Titanium |
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| Circumferential and centrifugal in the coronal plane (craniocaudal + lateral) | Bidirectional in craniocaudal or vertical direction |
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| Hydraulic, by a kyphoplasty ballon (pressure and volume controlled) | Mechanic |
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| Maximum pressure of 30 Atm; Maximum expansion volumes: #Small stent = 4 ml; #Medium stent = 4.5 ml; #Large stent = 5 ml | Expansion force of 500 Newtons; Maximum expansion heights: #Small implant, 4.2 size = 12.5 mm; #Medium implant, 5.0 size = 17 mm; #Large implant, 5.8 size = 20 mm |
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| Fracture reduction and space filling - Indicated for osteopenia, lithic injuries, and A4 burst traumatic fractures | Fracture reduction, preservation of non-fractured trabeculae - Indicated for A1, A2, and A3 fractures with healthy bones |
|
| VBS® is a reduction and space-filling implant system since it can multidirectionally expand (vertically and laterally). It is indicated for reconstructing or replacing the vertebral body without waiting for vertebral fracture healing. Stents are implants that form two cavities, coated by a casing of impacted trabeculae, within the vertebral body by expanding and impacting surrounding bony trabeculae. These implants form cavities that, after being filled with cement or bone graft, replace much of the vertebral body, filling and stabilizing it. Moreover, they minimize cement extravasation by recreating the walls of the vertebral body via impaction of bony trabeculae containing the cement. | SpineJack® is a more powerful reduction implant and preserver of non-fractured native bone trabeculae, rather than a filler, as it has only vertical expansion and not lateral. In these cases, fracture reduction and healing is intended, rather than replacing the vertebral body. This implant only reduces and sustains the vertebral body since it shows neither cavitary shape nor lateral expansion. It is incapable of destroying intact lateral trabeculae and does not create significant empty space inside the vertebral body. Thus, it is useful when it is intended to reduce the fracture and obtain bone healing, preserving as much of healthy bone as possible. Therefore, we consider this implant not ideal for replacing the comminuted vertebral body, lytic or porotic, a vertebra that does not have content and needs intrasomatic filling in addition of fracture reduction. |
Figure 2Schematic representation of the objectives for each type of vertebral compression fracture, according to bone quality and the AOSpine classification, as well as the justification for choosing the expandable intravertebral implant to be applied and the need or not for pedicular instrumentation.