Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976). 2011 Mar 15;36(6):E393-400. doi: 10.1097/BRS.0b013e31820b7e2f.
In vivo validation during functional loading.
To determine the accuracy and repeatability of a model-based tracking technique that combines subject-specific computed tomographic (CT) models and high-speed biplane x-ray images to measure three-dimensional (3D) in vivo cervical spine motion.
Accurate 3D spine motion is difficult to obtain in vivo during physiological loading because of the inability to directly attach measurement equipment to individual vertebrae. Previous measurement systems were limited by two-dimensional (2D) results and/or their need for manual identification of anatomical landmarks, precipitating unreliable and inaccurate results. All previous techniques lack the ability to capture true 3D motion during dynamic functional loading.
Three subjects had 1.0-mm-diameter tantalum beads implanted into their fused and adjacent vertebrae during anterior cervical discectomy and fusion surgery. High-resolution CT scans were obtained after surgery and used to create subject-specific 3D models of each cervical vertebra. Biplane x-ray images were collected at 30 frames per second while the subjects performed flexion/extension and axial rotation movements 6 months after surgery. Individual bone motion, intervertebral kinematics, and arthrokinematics derived from dynamic radiostereophotogrammetric analysis served as a gold standard to evaluate the accuracy of the model-based tracking technique.
Individual bones were tracked with an average precision of 0.19 and 0.33 mm in nonfused and fused bones, respectively. Precision in measuring 3D joint kinematics in fused and adjacent segments averaged 0.4 mm for translations and 1.1° for rotations, while anterior and posterior disc height above and below the fusion were measured with a precision ranging between 0.2 and 0.4 mm. The variability in 3D joint kinematics associated with tracking the same trial repeatedly was 0.02 mm in translation and 0.06° in rotation.
The 3D cervical spine motion can be precisely measured in vivo with submillimeter accuracy during functional loading without the need for bead implantation. Fusion instrumentation did not diminish the accuracy of kinematic and arthrokinematic results. The semiautomated model-based tracking technique has excellent repeatability.
功能加载中的体内验证。
确定一种基于模型的跟踪技术的准确性和可重复性,该技术结合了特定于个体的计算机断层扫描(CT)模型和高速双平面 X 射线图像,以测量三维(3D)体内颈椎运动。
由于无法直接将测量设备附着到单个椎骨上,因此在生理负荷下很难在体内获得准确的 3D 脊柱运动。以前的测量系统受到二维(2D)结果和/或需要手动识别解剖学标志的限制,导致结果不可靠和不准确。所有以前的技术都缺乏在动态功能加载期间捕获真实 3D 运动的能力。
三名患者在接受前路颈椎间盘切除融合术期间在融合和相邻椎骨中植入了 1.0 毫米直径的钽珠。手术后获得高分辨率 CT 扫描,并用于创建每个颈椎的特定于个体的 3D 模型。在手术后 6 个月,当患者进行屈伸和轴向旋转运动时,以每秒 30 帧的速度采集双平面 X 射线图像。动态放射立体摄影分析得出的个体骨骼运动、椎间运动学和关节运动学作为评估基于模型的跟踪技术准确性的金标准。
在未融合和融合的骨骼中,个体骨骼的跟踪精度分别为 0.19 和 0.33 毫米。在融合和相邻节段测量 3D 关节运动学的精度平均为平移 0.4 毫米,旋转 1.1°,而融合上方和下方的前、后椎间盘高度的测量精度在 0.2 至 0.4 毫米之间。重复跟踪同一试验时,3D 关节运动学的可变性在平移时为 0.02 毫米,在旋转时为 0.06°。
在功能加载期间,无需植入珠粒,即可精确地以亚毫米精度在体内测量 3D 颈椎运动。融合器械并未降低运动学和关节运动学结果的准确性。半自动基于模型的跟踪技术具有出色的可重复性。