Biomechanical testing of the lumbosacral spine.
Objective: To assess various forms of anterior and posterior sacral fixation and to study the influence of anterior lumbosacral fixation and posterior pedicle fixation at L5 in conjunction with lumbosacral fixation.
Background: Moments at the lumbosacral junction are high in the long constructs requiring lumbosacral fixation. The purpose of this study was to assess bending moments in flexion-extension and lateral bending and rotational forces at the lumbosacral junction involving a variety of long constructs to the lumbosacral junction. The incidence of pseudarthrosis in such constructs in the adult spine literature ranges from 7% to 40%.
Methods: An alignment jig was designed to display three-dimensional motion in the three orthogonal planes. Nine constructs of five specimens each were tested. These consisted of fixation at T12-L5-S1 (construct 1), T12-L5-S1 with anterior L5-S1 fixation and grafting (construct 2), T12-L5-S1, S2 with and without L5-S1 fixation and grafting anterior (constructs 3 and 4, respectfully), T12-S1, S2 with and without L5-S1 anterior grafting and fixation (constructs 5 and 6, respectfully), T12 Jackson intrasacral fixation with or without L5-S1 grafting anteriorly at the anterior fixation (constructs 7 and 8, respectfully), and T12-L5-S1, S2 fixation with anterior grafting only (construct 9).
Results: The use of anterior fixation statistically increased stiffness in extension. There was a trend toward increasing stiffness in constructs with anterior fixation (two anterior anterior-oblique L5-S1 screws) and in other loading modes as well. Failure to use L5 screw fixation significantly decreased torsional rigidity in long constructs without anterior fixation.
Conclusions: In long constructs, particularly in scoliosis surgery requiring lumbosacral fixation, the addition of anterior fixation at L5-S1 is recommended. The addition of L5 fixation in addition to sacral fixation significantly decreases rotational stresses and is recommended as well.