Taverne Maxime, Lalieve Laura, Persohn Sylvain, Khonsari Roman Hossein, Paternoster Giovanna, James Syril, Blauwblomme Thomas, Benichi Sandro, Laporte Sébastien
Craniofacial Growth and Form Laboratory, Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital, Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris, Paris, France.
Arts et Métiers - Institute of Technology, Institut de Biomécanique Humaine Georges Charpak, Paris, France.
J Morphol. 2024 Jul;285(7):e21748. doi: 10.1002/jmor.21748.
Genetic diseases with craniofacial malformations can be associated with anomalies of the craniocervical joint (CCJ). The functions of the CCJ are thus impaired, as mobility may be either limited by abnormal bone fusion causing headaches, or exaggerated in the case of hypermobility, which may cause irreparable damage to the spinal cord. Restoring the balance between mobility and stability requires surgical correction in children. The anatomy and biomechanics of the CCJ are quite unique, yet have been overlooked in the past decades. Pediatric evidence is so scarce, that investigating the adult CCJ is our best shot to disentangle the form-function relationships of this anatomical region. The motivation of the present study was to understand the morphological and functional basis of motion in the CCJ, in the hope to find morphological features accessible from medical imaging able to predict mobility. To do so, we have quantified the in-vitro kinematics of the CCJ in nine cadaveric asymptomatic adults, and estimated a wide range of mobility variables covering the complexity of spinal motion. We compared these variables with the shape of the occipital, the atlas and the axis, obtained using a dense geometric morphometric approach. Morphological joint congruence was also quantified. Our results suggest a strong relationship between bone shape and motion, with the overall geometry predicting best the primary movements, and the joint facets predicting best the secondary movements. We propose a functional hypothesis stating that the musculoligamental system determines movements of great amplitude, while the shape and congruence of joint facets determine the secondary and coupled movements, especially by varying the geometry of bone stops and the way ligaments are tensioned. We believe this work will provide valuable insights in understanding the biomechanics of the CCJ. Furthermore, it should help surgeons treating CCJ anomalies by enabling them to translate objectives of functional and clinical outcome into clear objectives of morphological outcome.
伴有颅面畸形的遗传疾病可能与颅颈关节(CCJ)异常有关。因此,CCJ的功能会受到损害,因为活动能力可能会因异常骨融合导致头痛而受限,或者在活动过度的情况下会过度增加,这可能会对脊髓造成不可修复的损伤。恢复活动能力和稳定性之间的平衡需要对儿童进行手术矫正。CCJ的解剖结构和生物力学相当独特,但在过去几十年中一直被忽视。儿科方面的证据非常稀少,以至于研究成人CCJ是我们厘清该解剖区域形态与功能关系的最佳途径。本研究的目的是了解CCJ运动的形态学和功能基础,希望找到能够从医学影像中获取的形态学特征,以预测活动能力。为此,我们对9具无症状成人尸体的CCJ体外运动学进行了量化,并估计了一系列涵盖脊柱运动复杂性的活动能力变量。我们将这些变量与使用密集几何形态测量方法获得的枕骨、寰椎和枢椎的形状进行了比较。还对形态学关节一致性进行了量化。我们的结果表明骨形状与运动之间存在密切关系,整体几何形状最能预测主要运动,而关节面最能预测次要运动。我们提出了一个功能假说,即肌肉韧带系统决定大幅度运动,而关节面的形状和一致性决定次要运动和耦合运动,特别是通过改变骨止点的几何形状和韧带张紧的方式。我们相信这项工作将为理解CCJ的生物力学提供有价值的见解。此外,它应该有助于治疗CCJ异常的外科医生将功能和临床结果目标转化为明确的形态学结果目标。