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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 106-B, Issue SUPP_1 | Pages 79 - 79
2 Jan 2024
Rasouligandomani M Chemorion F Bisotti M Noailly J Ballester MG
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Adult Spine Deformity (ASD) is a degenerative condition of the adult spine leading to altered spine curvatures and mechanical balance. Computational approaches, like Finite Element (FE) Models have been proposed to explore the etiology or the treatment of ASD, through biomechanical simulations. However, while the personalization of the models is a cornerstone, personalized FE models are cumbersome to generate. To cover this need, we share a virtual cohort of 16807 thoracolumbar spine FE models with different spine morphologies, presented in an online user-interface platform (SpineView). To generate these models, EOS images are used, and 3D surface spine models are reconstructed. Then, a Statistical Shape Model (SSM), is built, to further adapt a FE structured mesh template for both the bone and the soft tissues of the spine, through mesh morphing. Eventually, the SSM deformation fields allow the personalization of the mean structured FE model, leading to generate FE meshes of thoracolumbar spines with different morphologies. Models can be selectively viewed and downloaded through SpineView, according to personalized user requests of specific morphologies characterized by the geometrical parameters: Pelvic Incidence; Pelvic Tilt; Sacral Slope; Lumbar Lordosis; Global Tilt; Cobb Angle; and GAP score. Data quality is assessed using visual aids, correlation analyses, heatmaps, network graphs, Anova and t-tests, and kernel density plots to compare spinopelvic parameter distributions and identify similarities and differences. Mesh quality and ranges of motion have been assessed to evaluate the quality of the FE models. This functional repository is unique to generate virtual patient cohorts in ASD. Acknowledgements: European Commission (MSCA-TN-ETN-2020-Disc4All-955735, ERC-2021-CoG-O-Health-101044828)


Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 103-B, Issue SUPP_4 | Pages 81 - 81
1 Mar 2021
Roth AK Willem PC van Rhijn LW Arts JJ Ito K van Rietbergen B
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Currently, between 17% of patients undergoing surgery for adult spinal deformity experience severe instrumentation related problems such as screw pullout or proximal junctional failure necessitating revision surgery. Cables may be used to reinforce pedicle screw fixation as an additive measure or may provide less rigid fixation at the construct end levels in order to prevent junctional level problems. The purpose of this study is to provide insight into the maximum expected load during flexion in UHMWPE cable in constructs intended for correction of adult spine deformity (degenerative scoliosis) in the PoSTuRe first-in-man clinical trial. Following the concept of toppinoff, a new construct is proposed with screw/cable fixation of rods at the lower levels and standalone UHMWPE cables at the upper level (T11). A parametric FE model of the instrumented thoracolumbar spine, which has been previously validated, was used to represent the construct. Pedicle screws are modeled by assigning a rigid tie constraint between the rod and the lamina of the corresponding spinal level. Cables are modeled using linear elastic line elements, fixing the rod to the lamina medially at the cranial laminar end and laterally at the caudal laminar end. A Youngs modulus was assigned such that the stiffness of the line element was the same as that of the cable. An 8 Nm flexion moment was applied to the cranial endplate. The maximum value of the force in the wire (80 N) is found at the T11 (upper) level. At the other levels, forces in the cable are very small because most of the force is carried by the screw (T12) or because the wires are force shielded by the contralateral and adjacent level pedicle screws (L2, L3). The model provides first estimates of the forces that can be expected in the UHMWPE cables in constructs for kyphosis correction during movement. It is expected that this approach can help in defining the number of wires for optimal treatment


Bone & Joint Open
Vol. 3, Issue 1 | Pages 77 - 84
24 Jan 2022
Onishi E Ota S Fujita S Tsukamoto Y Yamashita S Hashimura T Matsunaga K Yasuda T

Aims

This study aimed to evaluate sagittal spinopelvic alignment (SSPA) in the early stage of rapidly destructive coxopathy (RDC) compared with hip osteoarthritis (HOA), and to identify risk factors of SSPA for destruction of the femoral head within 12 months after the disease onset.

Methods

This study enrolled 34 RDC patients with joint space narrowing > 2 mm within 12 months after the onset of hip pain and 25 HOA patients showing femoral head destruction. Sharp angle was measured for acetabular coverage evaluation. Femoral head collapse ratio was calculated for assessment of the extent of femoral head collapse by RDC. The following parameters of SSPA were evaluated using the whole spinopelvic radiograph: pelvic tilt (PT), sacral slope (SS), pelvic incidence (PI), sagittal vertical axis (SVA), thoracic kyphosis angle (TK), lumbar lordosis angle (LL), and PI-LL.