Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation, Biomechanics Research Laboratory, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT 06520, USA.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2010 May 1;35(10):E400-6. doi: 10.1097/BRS.0b013e3181bb4d2c.
An in vitro biomechanical study of the effectiveness of halo-vest fixation.
The objective was to evaluate motion of the injured cervical spine with normal halo-vest application and vest loose in the prone and supine positions.
Snaking motion of the neck is defined as rotation in opposing directions throughout the cervical spine. Previous clinical studies have suggested snaking neck motion due to the halo-vest may lead to inadequate healing or nonunion.
The halo-vest was applied to a Human Model of the Neck, which consisted of a cervical spine specimen mounted to the torso of an anthropometric test dummy and carrying a surrogate head. The model was transitioned from prone, to upright, to supine with the halo-vest applied normally and with the vest loose. Average peak spinal motions were computed in the prone and supine positions and contrasted with the physiologic rotation range, obtained from the intact flexibility test, and statistically compared (P < 0.05) between normal halo-vest application and vest loose.
Snaking motion of the neck was observed in the prone and supine positions, consisting of extension at head/C1 and C1/2 and flexion at the inferior spinal levels. The intervertebral rotation peaks generally exceeded the physiologic range throughout the cervical spine due to the loose vest in the prone position. Significant increases in the extension peaks at head/C1 (16.9 degrees vs. 5.7 degrees) and flexion peaks at C4/5 (6.9 degrees vs. 3.6 degrees) and C7-T1 (5.2 degrees vs. 0.7 degrees) were observed in the prone position due to the loose vest, as compared to normal halo-vest application. Axial neck separation was consistently observed in the prone and supine positions.
The present results, which document snaking motion of the cervical spine due to the halo-vest, indicate that an inadequately fitting or loose vest may significantly diminish its immobilization capacity leading to delayed healing or nonunion.
halo-vest 固定效果的体外生物力学研究。
评估正常 halo-vest 应用和背心在仰卧位和俯卧位时松动的颈椎运动。
颈部蛇行运动是指整个颈椎向相反方向旋转。先前的临床研究表明,halo-vest 引起的颈部蛇行运动可能导致愈合不良或不愈合。
halo-vest 应用于一个由颈椎标本安装在人体模型躯干上的颈部模型,并带有一个替代头部。模型从俯卧位、直立位到仰卧位转换,halo-vest 正常应用和背心松动。计算俯卧位和仰卧位的平均峰值脊柱运动,并与完整灵活性测试获得的生理旋转范围进行对比,并在正常 halo-vest 应用和背心松动之间进行统计学比较(P < 0.05)。
在俯卧位和仰卧位观察到颈部蛇行运动,包括头/C1 和 C1/2 处的伸展以及下脊柱处的屈曲。由于背心松动,整个颈椎的椎间旋转峰值通常超过生理范围。与正常 halo-vest 应用相比,仰卧位时头/C1 处伸展峰值显著增加(16.9 度对 5.7 度),C4/5 处(6.9 度对 3.6 度)和 C7-T1 处(5.2 度对 0.7 度)的屈曲峰值也显著增加。由于背心松动,在仰卧位和俯卧位始终观察到颈部轴向分离。
本研究结果记录了 halo-vest 引起的颈椎蛇行运动,表明不合适或松动的背心可能显著降低其固定能力,导致愈合延迟或不愈合。