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STRING TEST MEASUREMENT TO ASSESS THE EFFECT
OF SPINAL DEFORMITY CORRECTION ON SPINAL CORD LENGTH
Keith H. Bridwell,
Timothy R Kuklo,
Stephen J Lewis,
Fred A Sweet,
Lawrence G. Lenke
St. Louis, MO, USA
INTRODUCTION:
When neurologic deficit occurs with an operative procedure, the surgeon
removes the implants either because they are imploding into the spinal
canal or the canal has been lengthened. Therefore, it is critical to know
the effect certain constructs have on spinal canal length since the ability
of the spinal cord to adapt to lengthening of the canal is variable.
PURPOSE/HYPOTHESIS:
Our hypothesis was that anterior and posterior compression instrumentation
would shorten the spinal canal; rod rotation and translation maneuvers
posteriorly and anterior structural grafts lengthen the canal; 3rod and
translational maneuvers on larger curves (>90°) would shorten spinal canal
length by 'uncoiling.'
METHODS:
Long cassette AP and lateral xrays before and after surgical correction
were analyzed and string test measurements made (Spine 1998;23:32431)
by 3 observers in 42 surgical cases. 13 surgical types were studied: 1)
anterior compression lumbar curves without cages (N=3); 2) anterior compression
lumbar curves with cages (N=4); 3) rod rotation maneuvers thoracic curves
(N=2); 4) rod rotation maneuvers double major curves (N=3); 5) posterior
translational correction (in situ rod contouring and Wisconsin wire tightening
without distraction) of thoracic curves (N=4); 6) anterior compression
of thoracic curves with (N=l) and without (N=2) cages; 7) posterior correction
of double thoracic curves (N=3); 8) posterior correction of thoracic curves
over 90° (N=5); 9) posterior correction of Scheuermann's kyphosis (N=3);
10) correction of fixed kyphosis with SmithPetersen osteotomies (N=3);
11) correction of fixed kyphosis with pedicle subtraction osteotomies
(N=3); 12) long fusions to the sacrum in adult scoliotics with multilevel
lumbar Harms cages (N=3); 13) corpectomy and cage/structural allograft
reconstruction for fracture (N=3). The segments measured were those fused
and instrumented. On the coronal xrays, the concavity, convexity, midvertebral
and adjusted midvertebral lines were measured. On the sagittal radiographs,
the anterior and posterior vertebral body lines were measured. The adjusted
coronal line was the assumed path of the spinal cord starting at the midportion
of the vertebral body at the top and the bottom of the deformity and then
in between, hugging the pedicles as closely as possible while staying
inside the pedicles. Adjustments for magnification were made before and
after by measuring neutral and visible vertebrae.
RESULTS:
Measurements were consistent and reproducible for each of the 3 observers.
Anterior compression instrumentation without cages consistently shortened
the spinal canal, inducing the concave, midvertebral and adjusted measurement
(3 to 7mm), while anterior instrumentation with cages lengthened the
canal (+6 to +12mm). Adult scoliotics treated with Harms cages in all
lumbar segments demonstrated canal lengthening (+9 to +25mm). Rod rotation
maneuvers consistently lengthened the canal (+5 to + 11mm), as did translational
maneuvers done without the use of distractive force (+6 to +15mm). For
large (90°140°) curves, we found the canal length increased (3 3rod
technique, 2 translational corrections) as judged by the concave vertebral,
midvertebral and adjusted measurements (+2 to +22mm). The spinal canal
was shortened both with pedicle subtraction procedures (7 to 30mm),
SmithPetersen osteotomies (4 to 15mm), and Scheuermann's kyphosis cases
treated by anterior release, morselized grafting and posterior compression/cantilever
(9 to 32mm).
CONCLUSION:
Anterior and posterior compression constructs without structural grafting
shorten the spinal canal as do pedicle subtracton and SmithPetersen osteotomies.
Translational and rod rotational forces lengthen the canal. Comparing
large (>90°) to mediumsized (50°90°) curves, contrary to our initial
hypothesis, the canal is lengthened by both. Compression constructs in
association with anterior column structural grafting/cages most commonly
lengthen the spinal canal. Many deformity correction maneuvers, although
they do not directly include application of posterior or anterior distraction
forces, do indirectly lengthen the spinal canal.
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