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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 91-B, Issue SUPP_III | Pages 453 - 453
1 Sep 2009
Barrios C Riquelme O Burgos J Hevia E Gonzalez-Lopez J Correa C
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This work was aimed at study the role of paraspinal muscles on spinal tensegrity. Four different models of spinal tensegrity breakage with and without injury of the posterior spinal muscle were investigated.

Fifteen minipigs (mean age 6-week) underwent costotransversectomy (CTT) at 5 consecutive vertebral segments. In 4 animals ribs and transverse processes (T7–T11) were removed through a posterior midline approach with complete desinsertion of paraspinal muscles. In other 3 animals, CTT was performed by a posterolateral approach (T6–T10) without detachment of paraspinal muscles. Other 4 minipigs underwent rib resection (T7-T11) throughout a thoracoscopic approach avoiding damage of posterior spinal muscles. A final group of 4 animals, a complete detachment of the paraspinal muscles was performed from T7 to T11 without removing bony structures and leaving in deep surgical wax attached to the spinous and transverse processes to avoid reinsertion of the muscles after surgery. Anatomic specimens were radiologically and macroscopically studied just at sacrifice 5 months after surgery

All 4 animals operated on of CTT by midline posterior approach developed structural spinal deformity with curve convexity at the side of rib removal (mean Cobb angle 34,6°). Animals undergoing CTT by posterolateral approach without paraspinal muscle detachment did not develop any significant spinal deformity. Absence of spinal deformity was also found in those animals in which rib resection was performed by thoracoscopy without injury of the posterior spinal muscles. All 4 animals undergoing detachment of the paraspinal muscles without CTT and application of the surgical wax developed scoliotic curves (mean Cobb angle of 28°).

In conclusion, a new insight on the underlying pathogenic mechanisms of scoliotic curves is given by using this spinal tensegrity model. Isolated damage of the posterior muscle-ligamentous structures around the costotransverse joints breaking muscles spine tensegrity seems to be mandatory to induce scoliotic deformity. Rib removal alone appeared to have less scoliotic inductive implication. The finding questions previous knowledge on scoliosis etiopathogeny.