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Orthopaedic Proceedings
Vol. 94-B, Issue SUPP_X | Pages 142 - 142
1 Apr 2012
Dhir J Carpenter C Pande R Pyrovolou N Ahuja S
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We do know that the use of stand-alone cage with no plate is prone to subsidence and segmental kyphosis. Cage and plate construct are prone to adjacent level ossification. Zero P (Synthes, UK) cage combines the functionality of spacer and anterior plate.

Radiological evaluation of subsidence of cervical spine after anterior cervical interbody fusion using Zero P cage system.

Method: Retrospective review of radiographic records of patients undergoing surgery between June 2008- Oct 2009. We evaluated lateral cervical standing radiographs before, after, 6 weeks, 3, 6 months of surgery. We measured subsidence (using Total Intervertebral Height (TIH). All measurements were done using Web 1000 (Impax Agfa). Two level was treated as single segment. Subsidence > 3mm was considered significant.

20 patients (11 male: 9 female) with median age of 51 yrs (40-65) underwent one (n=10) or two level (n= 10) cervical fusion. Immediately post-op there was increase in TIH in one and two level group by 1.74mm (1.61 and 4.25mm (1.48 respectively, which at 6 months reduced to 1.05mm (0.24 (p< 0.003) and 1.32mm (1.29 (p< 0.085) at 6 months respectively. Subsidence was seen in all cases and was rapid in first 3 months and then tailed off. It was significant (> 3mm) only in 2/20 (2%) patients at 6 months.

Early results indicate that spine alignment is maintained radiologically with no associated complications as screw loosening, cage extrusion etc.