AI Article Synopsis

  • A prospective cohort study aimed to explore how various patient factors influence the movement of adjacent spinal segments after anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) using advanced biplane radiography.
  • Previous research has linked patient characteristics to adjacent segment disease (ASD), but this study uniquely examined how these factors relate to the spinal mechanics involved in ASD development.
  • Results indicated that specific preoperative conditions like disc height and bulging, alongside lifestyle factors such as smoking and medication use, are significant predictors of changes in adjacent segment motion post-surgery.

Article Abstract

Study Design: Prospective cohort study.

Objective: The aim was to identify patient factors that affect adjacent segment kinematics after anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) as measured by biplane radiography.

Summary Of Background Data: The etiology of adjacent segment disease (ASD) may be multifactorial. Previous studies have investigated associations between patient factors and ASD, although few attempted to link patient factors with mechanical changes in the spine that may explain ASD development. Previous studies manually measured intervertebral motion from static flexion/extension radiographs, however, manual measurements are unreliable, and those studies failed to measure intervertebral motion during rotation.

Methods: Patients had continuous cervical spine flexion/extension and axial rotation movements captured at 30 images per second in a dynamic biplane radiography system preoperatively and 1 year after ACDF. Digitally reconstructed radiographs generated from subject-specific computed tomography scans were matched to the biplane radiographs using a validated tracking process. Dynamic kinematics and preoperative disc height were calculated from this tracking process. Preoperative magnetic resonance imagings were evaluated for disc bulge. Patient age, sex, body mass index, smoking status, diabetes, psychiatric history, presence of an inciting event, and length of symptoms were collected. Multivariate linear regression was performed to identify patient factors associated with 1-year postoperative changes in adjacent segment kinematics.

Results: Sixty-three patients completed preoperative and postoperative testing. Superior adjacent segment disc height and disc bulge predicted the change in superior adjacent segment range of motion after surgery. Inferior adjacent segment disc bulge, smoking history, and the use of psychiatric medications predicted the change in inferior adjacent segment flexion/extension range of motion after surgery.

Conclusions: Preexisting adjacent segment disc degeneration, as indicated by disc height and disc bulge, was associated with reduced adjacent segment motion after ACDF, while lack of preexisting adjacent disc degeneration was associated with increased adjacent segment motion after ACDF. These findings provide in vivo evidence supporting early instability and late stabilization in the pathophysiology of disc degeneration.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9378554PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/BRS.0000000000004388DOI Listing

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