4.4 Article

Lordosis restoration after anterior longitudinal ligament release and placement of lateral hyperlordotic interbody cages during the minimally invasive lateral transpsoas approach: a radiographic study in cadavers Laboratory investigation

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY-SPINE
Volume 17, Issue 5, Pages 476-485

Publisher

AMER ASSOC NEUROLOGICAL SURGEONS
DOI: 10.3171/2012.8.SPINE111121

Keywords

XLIF; deformity; kyphosis; lordosis; correction; anterior longitudinal ligament release; sagittal balance; spine; minimal invasive surgery

Funding

  1. NuVasive, Inc.
  2. DePuy

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Object. In the surgical treatment of spinal deformities, the importance of restoring lumbar lordosis is well recognized. Smith-Petersen osteotomies (SPOs) yield approximately 10 degrees of lordosis per level, whereas pedicle subtraction osteotomies result in as much as 30 degrees increased lumbar lordosis. Recently, selective release of the anterior longitudinal ligament (ALL) and placement of lordotic interbody grafts using the minimally invasive lateral retroperitoneal transpsoas approach (XLIF) has been performed as an attempt to increase lumbar lordosis while avoiding the morbidity of osteotomy. The objective of the present study was to measure the effect of the selective release of the ALL and varying degrees of lordotic implants placed using the XLIF approach on segmental lumbar lordosis in cadaveric specimens between L-1 and L-5. Methods. Nine adult fresh-frozen cadaveric specimens were placed in the lateral decubitus position. Lateral radiographs were obtained at baseline and after 4 interventions at each level as follows: 1) placement of a standard 10 degrees lordotic cage, 2) ALL release and placement of a 10 degrees lordotic cage, 3) ALL release and placement of a 20 degrees lordotic cage, and 4) ALL release and placement of a 30 lordotic cage. All four cages were implanted sequentially at each interbody level between L-1 and L-5. Before and after each intervention, segmental lumbar lordosis was measured in all specimens at each interbody level between L-1 and L-5 using the Cobb method on lateral radiography. Results. The mean baseline segmental lordotic angles at L1-2, L2-3, L3-4, and L4-5 were -3.8 degrees, 3.8 degrees, 7.8 degrees, and 22.6 degrees, respectively. The mean lumbar lordosis was 29.4 degrees. Compared with baseline, the mean postimplantation increase in segmental lordosis in all levels combined was 0.9 degrees in Intervention 1(10 degrees cage without ALL release); 4.1 degrees in Intervention 2 (ALL release with 10 degrees cage); 9.5 degrees in Intervention 3 (ALL release with 20 degrees cage); and 11.6 degrees in Intervention 4 (ALL release with 30 degrees cage). Foraminal height in the same sequence of conditions increased by 6.3%, 4.6%, 8.8% and 10.4%, respectively, while central disc height increased by 16.1%, 22.3%, 52.0% and 66.7%, respectively. Following ALL release and placement of lordotic cages at all 4 lumbar levels, the average global lumbar lordosis increase from preoperative lordosis was 3.2 degrees using 10 degrees cages, 12.0 degrees using 20 degrees cages, and 20.3 degrees using 30 degrees cages. Global lumbar lordosis with the cages at 4 levels exhibited a negative correlation with preoperative global lordosis (10 degrees, R = -0.756; 20 degrees, -0.730; and 30 degrees, R = -0.437). Conclusions. Combined ALL release and placement of increasingly lordotic lateral interbody cages leads to progressive gains in segmental lordosis in the lumbar spine. Mean global lumbar lordosis similarly increased with increasingly lordotic cages, although the effect with a single cage could not be evaluated. Greater global lordosis was achieved with smaller preoperative lordosis. The mean maximum increase in segmental lordosis of 11.6 degrees followed ALL release and placement of the 30 degrees cage. (http://thejns.org/doi/abs/10.3171/2012.8.SPINE111121)

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