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The Effect of Sacroiliac Fusion and Pelvic Fixation on Rod Strain in Thoracolumbar Fusion Constructs: A Biomechanical Investigation

  • Harry M. Mushlin
  • , Phelan Shea
  • , Daina M. Brooks
  • , Gerald M. Hayward
  • , Bryan J. Ferrick
  • , Joshua Olexa
  • , Brandon S. Bucklen
  • , Charles Sansur

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Scopus citations

Abstract

Study Design.In vitro biomechanical study.Objective.Investigate effects of sacroiliac joint (SIJ) fusion and iliac fixation on distal rod strain in thoracolumbar fusions.Summary of Background Data.Instrument failure is a multifactorial, challenging problem frequently encountered by spinal surgeons. Increased rod strain may lead to instrumentation failure and rod fracture.Methods.Seven fresh frozen human cadaveric specimens (T9-pelvis) used. Six operative constructs tested to investigate changes in rod strain at L5-S1 and S1-Ilium rods, posterior pedicle screws/rods from T10-S1 (PS), PS + bilateral iliac screw fixation, PS + unilateral iliac screw fixation (UIS), PS+UIS+3 unilateral SIJ screws, PS + 3 unilateral SIJ screws, and PS +6 bilateral SIJ screws. Uniaxial strain gauges were used to measure surface strain of rods during flexion-extension.Results.In flexion-extension, bilateral iliac screws added significant strain to L5-S1 compared with long fusion constructs ending at S1 (PS) (P<0.05). Unilateral iliac fixation exhibited highest strain to L5-S1 ipsilateral rod, was significantly higher compared with bilateral iliac fixation and PS construct. Unilateral and bilateral SIJ fusion did not significantly change L5-S1 rod strain compared with PS. When measuring S1-Ilium rod strain, unilateral pelvic fixation had highest reported rod strain, approached significance compared with bilateral iliac screws (P=0.054). Addition of contralateral SIJ fusion did not affect rod strain at S1-ilium on side with unilateral fixation.Conclusion.Results showed additional fixation below S1 to pelvis added significant rod strain. Unilateral pelvic screws had highest rod strain; SIJ fusion did not affect rod strain. Findings can help guide surgeons when associated risk of rod failure is a consideration.Level of Evidence: N/A.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)E769-E775
JournalSpine
Volume46
Issue number14
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 15 2021

Keywords

  • distal rod strain
  • flexion-extension
  • iliac fixation
  • sacroiliac joint fusion
  • thoracolumbar fusions

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