Reduction of cement leakage by sequential PMMA application in a vertebroplasty model.

Eur Spine J

Department of Orthopedic Surgery and Traumatology, Inselspital Bern, Bern University Hospital, 3010, Bern, Switzerland.

Published: November 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Leakage is a common issue during spine cement augmentation, with the viscosity of PMMA cement influencing the risk of leakage.
  • A study tested three different injection techniques: all-in-one, two-step, and sequential, to determine their effect on leakage rates in a vertebroplasty model.
  • Results showed that the sequential injection technique significantly reduced leakage (2/20 cases) compared to the other methods, indicating it as a more effective approach for minimizing cement leakage during procedures.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Leakage is the most common complication of percutaneous cement augmentation of the spine. The viscosity of the polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) cement is strongly correlated with the likelihood of cement leakage. We hypothesized that cement leakage can be reduced by sequential cement injection in a vertebroplasty model.

Methods: A standardized vertebral body substitute model, consisting of aluminum oxide foams coated by acrylic cement with a preformed leakage path, simulating a ventral vein, was developed. Three injection techniques of 6 ml PMMA were assessed: injection in one single step (all-in-one), injection of 1 ml at the first and 5 ml at the second step with 1 min latency in-between (two-step), and sequential injection of 0.5 ml with 1-min latency between the sequences (sequential). Standard PMMA vertebroplasty cement was used; each injection type was tested on ten vertebral body substitute models with two possible leakage paths per model. Leakage was assessed by radiographs using a zonal graduation: intraspongious = no leakage and extracortical = leakage.

Results: The leakage rate was significantly lower in the "sequential" technique (2/20 leakages) followed by "two-step" (15/20) and "all-in-one" (20/20) techniques (p < 0.001). The RR for a cement leakage was 10.0 times higher in the "all-in-one" compared to the "sequential" group (95 % confidence intervals 2.7-37.2; p < 0.001).

Conclusions: The sequential cement injection is a simple approach to minimize the risk for leakage. Taking advantage of the temperature gradient between body and room temperature, it is possible to increase the cement viscosity inside the vertebra while keeping it low in the syringe. Using sequential injection of small cement volumes, further leakage paths are blocked before further injection of the low-viscosity cement.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00586-015-3920-3DOI Listing

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