Four male patients aged 33, 44, 45 and 52 years, who had undergone different spinal stabilisation procedures consisting of flexible stabilisation (DNESYS), posterior instrumented fusion, and anterior interbody fusion with facet fixation were investigated. Images were acquired and analysed in the same way except that a larger number of images (500 per screening) was utilised in each case. Four operated levels and 2 adjacent levels were analysed. All motion patterns were easily distinguishable from those of the normal subjects. The PLIF and DYNESYS stabilisations demonstrated no motion at the instrumented levels. The anterior inter-body fusion-transfacet fixation patient was shown to have developed a pseudarthrosis.
Registration of the images of each vertebra by templates which are automatically tracked and whose output is converted to inter-vertebral kinematic parameters and averaged for display and reporting. Results are currently displayed as inter-vertebral angles throughout the motion that indicate whether or not solid fusion has been achieved. The Instrument Measurement Error is quantifiable and will vary with image quality, but can be improved by averaging. The technology is applicable to any imaging system of sufficient speed and resolution and may, for example, be used with MR in the future.
This study compared the effect of manipulation with a period of normal activity on the range of intervertebral sidebending. Thirty asymptomatic male volunteers were randomised to treatment or control groups. All were subjected to low-dose X-ray screening through 80° of passive lumbar spine side-bending. Motion sequences were digitised at a 5Hz sampling rate. The treatment group (n=16) had rotary manipulation to each lumbar linkage, followed by normal activity. The control group (n=14) had normal activity only. Both groups were then re-screened. Each vertebral pair was tracked and intervertebral rotation throughout the motion measured. Three subjects were analysed 10 times for reliability and all intervertebral motion was tracked twice. Twenty-one manipulated linkages and 10 controls met the reliability criteria. For non-manipulated segments the mean range at first screening was 14.2° (SD 1.39) and manipulated segments 12.8° (SD 3.81). The range of the non-manipulated segments increased by +0.9o and the manipulated segments by +0.4°. The change in manipulated segments was negligible and similar to controls, although the instrument can be sufficiently reliable to measure a 2° difference. The technique is sufficiently robust to determine if spinal manipulation changes these ranges in selected patients.