Biomechanical Comparison of Facet Versus Laminar C2 Screws.

Neurosurgery

Spine Surgery Unit, Hôpital Neurologique Pierre Wertheimer, Hospices Civils de Lyon, and University Claude Bernard of Lyon 1, Bron , France.

Published: October 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluates the pull-out resistance of two types of screws used for C2 vertebra instrumentation: bicortical facet screws (FS) and laminar screws (LS), with LS being the more established option due to compatibility issues with anatomy.* -
  • In tests conducted on 32 human cadaveric C2 vertebrae, LS demonstrated a significantly higher average pull-out strength (707 N) compared to FS (390 N), indicating that LS is mechanically superior in this context.* -
  • The findings suggest that while both methods can be viable, bicortical FS may be less reliable than LS for anchoring in C2 vertebrae, especially when laminar grip is achievable.*

Article Abstract

Background: Transpedicular or transisthmic screws for C2 instrumentation represent the gold standard; however, the anatomy is not always compatible (hypoplastic pedicles, procidentia of the vertebral artery). Laminar screws (LS) have been proposed as a rescue technique and recently, bicortical facet screws (FS). To date, the biomechanical property of FS remains unknown.

Objective: To compare the pull-out resistance of bicortical facet (FS) vs laminar (LS) C2 screws.

Methods: Thirty-two human cadaveric C2 vertebrae were screened by CT scan imaging and dual x-ray absorptiometry before receiving both techniques and were randomized according to side and sequence (FS or LS first). Screw positioning was validated using 2-dimensional x-rays. Sixty-four mechanical tests were performed using pure tensile loading along the axis of the screws until pull-out. Mean pull-out strengths were compared using paired tests, multivariate and survival analysis (Kaplan-Meier curves).

Results: The morphometric data were consistent with previous studies. Over 64 tests, the mean pull-out strength of LS (707 ± 467 N) was significantly higher than that of FS (390 ± 230 N) ( P = .0004). Bone mineral density was weakly correlated with pull-out strength (r = 0.42 for FS and r = 0.3 for LS). Both techniques were mechanically equivalent for vertebrae in which intralaminar cortical grip was not achievable for LS. The mean pull-out strength for LS with laminar cortical grip (1071 ± 395 N) was significantly higher than that of LS without (423 ± 291 N) ( P < .0001).

Conclusion: Our results suggest that bicortical FS of C2 offer less mechanical resistance than LS.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1227/neu.0000000000002492DOI Listing

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