Do design variations in the artificial disc influence cervical spine biomechanics? A finite element investigation

被引:5
|
作者
Ahmad Faizan
Vijay K. Goel
Steven R. Garfin
Christopher M. Bono
Hassan Serhan
Ashok Biyani
Hossein Elgafy
Manoj Krishna
Tai Friesem
机构
[1] University of Toledo,Engineering Center for Orthopaedic Research Excellence (E
[2] University of California,CORE), Departments of Bioengineering and Orthopaedic Surgery, 5046 NI, MS 303, Colleges of Engineering and Medicine
[3] San Diego,Department of Orthopaedics
[4] Harvard Medical School,Brigham and Women’s Hospital
[5] DePuy Spine,undefined
[6] The University Hospital of North Tees,undefined
来源
European Spine Journal | 2012年 / 21卷
关键词
Cervical; Disc replacement; Finite element; Biomechanics; Design variation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Various ball and socket-type designs of cervical artificial discs are in use or under investigation. Many artificial disc designs claim to restore the normal kinematics of the cervical spine. What differentiates one type of design from another design is currently not well understood. In this study, authors examined various clinically relevant parameters using a finite element model of C3–C7 cervical spine to study the effects of variations of ball and socket disc designs. Four variations of ball and socket-type artificial disc were placed at the C5–C6 level in an experimentally validated finite element model. Biomechanical effects of the shape (oval vs. spherical ball) and location (inferior vs. superior ball) were studied in detail. Range of motion, facet loading, implant stresses and capsule ligament strains were computed to investigate the influence of disc designs on resulting biomechanics. Motions at the implant level tended to increase following disc replacement. No major kinematic differences were observed among the disc designs tested. However, implant stresses were substantially higher in the spherical designs when compared to the oval designs. For both spherical and oval designs, the facet loads were lower for the designs with an inferior ball component. The capsule ligament strains were lower for the oval design with an inferior ball component. Overall, the oval design with an inferior ball component, produced motion, facet loads, implant stresses and capsule ligament strains closest to the intact spine, which may be key to long-term implant survival.
引用
收藏
页码:653 / 662
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Do design variations in the artificial disc influence cervical spine biomechanics? A finite element investigation
    Faizan, Ahmad
    Goel, Vijay K.
    Garfin, Steven R.
    Bono, Christopher M.
    Serhan, Hassan
    Biyani, Ashok
    Elgafy, Hossein
    Krishna, Manoj
    Friesem, Tai
    EUROPEAN SPINE JOURNAL, 2012, 21 : S653 - S662
  • [2] The Influence of Artificial Cervical Disc Prosthesis Height on the Cervical Biomechanics: A Finite Element Study
    Yuan, Wei
    Zhang, Haiping
    Zhou, Xiaoshu
    Wu, Weidong
    Zhu, Yue
    WORLD NEUROSURGERY, 2018, 113 : E490 - E498
  • [3] BIOMECHANICS OF CERVICAL SPINE FOLLOWING IMPLANTATION OF A SEMI-CONSTRAINED ARTIFICIAL DISC WITH UPWARD CENTER OF ROTATION: A FINITE ELEMENT INVESTIGATION
    Akbarian, D.
    Rouhi, G.
    Mashhadi, M. Mosavi
    Herzog, W.
    JOURNAL OF MECHANICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 2015, 15 (04)
  • [4] Effect of an artificial disc on lumbar spine biomechanics: a probabilistic finite element study
    Antonius Rohlmann
    Anke Mann
    Thomas Zander
    Georg Bergmann
    European Spine Journal, 2009, 18 : 89 - 97
  • [5] Effect of an artificial disc on lumbar spine biomechanics: a probabilistic finite element study
    Rohlmann, Antonius
    Mann, Anke
    Zander, Thomas
    Bergmann, Georg
    EUROPEAN SPINE JOURNAL, 2009, 18 (01) : 89 - 97
  • [6] Finite element biomechanics of cervical spine interbody fusion
    Kumaresan, S
    Yoganandan, N
    Pintar, FA
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 19TH ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE IEEE ENGINEERING IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY SOCIETY, VOL 19, PTS 1-6: MAGNIFICENT MILESTONES AND EMERGING OPPORTUNITIES IN MEDICAL ENGINEERING, 1997, 19 : 1853 - 1858
  • [7] Influence of different artificial disc kinematics on spine biomechanics
    Zander, Thomas
    Rohlmann, Antonius
    Bergmann, Georg
    CLINICAL BIOMECHANICS, 2009, 24 (02) : 135 - 142
  • [8] Comparison of Cervical Spine Biomechanics After Fixed- and Mobile-Core Artificial Disc Replacement: A Finite Element Analysis
    Lee, Sang-Hun
    Im, Yang-Jin
    Kim, Ki-Tack
    Kim, Yoon-Hyuk
    Park, Won-Man
    Kim, Kyungsoo
    SPINE, 2011, 36 (09) : 700 - 708
  • [9] Total disc replacement alters the biomechanics of cervical spine based on sagittal cervical alignment: A finite element study
    Mumtaz, Muzammil
    Mendoza, Justin
    Tripathi, Sudharshan
    Kelkar, Amey
    Nishida, Norihiro
    Sahai, Ashish
    Goel, Vijay K.
    JOURNAL OF CRANIOVERTEBRAL JUNCTION AND SPINE, 2022, 13 (03): : 278 - 287
  • [10] Implant Design and Cervical Spinal Biomechanics and Neurorehabilitation: A Finite Element Investigation
    Bahreinizad, Hossein
    Chowdhury, Suman K.
    MILITARY MEDICINE, 2024, 189 : 791 - 799