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Cadaveric biomechanical analysis of insufficiency fracture fixation techniques.


Current techniques for insufficiency fracture repair Fracture Repair Definition

Fracture repair is the process of rejoining and realigning the ends of broken bones. This procedure is usually performed by an orthopedist, general surgeon, or family doctor.
 restore prefracture strength and all potentially have the complication of cement extrusion. There is no information directly comparing different techniques. The study's purpose is to compare four techniques for vertebral ver·te·bral
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or of the nature of a vertebra.

2. Having or consisting of vertebrae.

3. Having a spinal column.
 body insufficiency fracture repair by analyzing restoration of height, strength, stiffness, and quantifying cement leakage. Four osteoporotic/osteopenic fresh cadaveric ca·dav·er  
n.
A dead body, especially one intended for dissection.



[Middle English, from Latin cad
 spines (T6-L5) vertebral bodies were divided into the four groups and by levels (thoracic, thoraco-lumbar, lumbar). They were compressed to 25% of their initial height to simulate compression fractures. The bones were fixed using Vertebroplasty, Osteoplasty osteoplasty /os·teo·plas·ty/ (-plas?te) plastic surgery of the bones.

os·te·o·plas·ty
n.
1. Surgical repair or alteration of bone. Also called bone grafting.

2.
 (Interpore Cross International, Irvine, CA), Cavity Creation System (Synthes, Paoli, PA), or Kyphoplasty (Kyphon, Sunnyvale, CA). Pre- and post-treatment height, strength and stiffness were measured. Cement leakage was significant if >1 mL leaked into the spinal canal spinal canal
n.
See vertebral canal.


Spinal canal
The opening that runs through the center of the column of spinal bones (vertebrae), and through which the spinal cord passes.
, endplate or periphery. Analysis of data was done using ANOVA anova

see analysis of variance.

ANOVA Analysis of variance, see there
. Strength was not significantly different between the techniques. All spine levels were significantly stronger post-fixation versus initially (P < 0.05). For each spine level and all levels combined, there was no significant difference in height restoration between techniques. Stiffness was significantly different in the lumbar levels between initial and post-fixation measurements (P < 0.05). There was no difference in stiffness at other levels or between fixation techniques. Cement extrusion was significant for L4 of the vertebroplasty group. It leaked 1 mL in the anterior periphery. The four fixation techniques were equal in restoring strength and stiffness. No difference was seen in height restoration. The lumbar levels decreased stiffness post-fixation may be due to using less cement than required to re-approximate initial stiffness. Cement extrusion was significant in only one vertebral body. This may be attributable to the small quantity of cement used for fixation. Overall, the three techniques were equal in restoration of height, strength and stiffness.

Heather McCann, MD, Matthew LePine, and John Glaser, MD. MUSC MUSC Medical University of South Carolina
MUSC Maritime and Underwater Security Consultants
MUSC Memphis Union Station Company
, Charleston, SC.
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Title Annotation:Section on Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery
Author:Glaser, John
Publication:Southern Medical Journal
Date:Oct 1, 2004
Words:308
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