Assessment of osseous corridor for transiliac–transsacral screws and clinical applications: Computational simulation study

Transiliac–transsacral (TITS) screw fixation might be necessary in some cases involving the vertical shearing injuries with transforaminal fracture and bilateral posterior ring injuries. However, the possibility of S1 TITS screw should be preoperatively assessed because the pelvic ring injuries with...

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Veröffentlicht in:Orthopaedics & traumatology, surgery & research surgery & research, 2020-09, Vol.106 (5), p.863-867
Hauptverfasser: Kim, Young-Woo, Jang, Jae-Hoon, Jung, Gu-Hee
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Transiliac–transsacral (TITS) screw fixation might be necessary in some cases involving the vertical shearing injuries with transforaminal fracture and bilateral posterior ring injuries. However, the possibility of S1 TITS screw should be preoperatively assessed because the pelvic ring injuries with sacral dysmorphism had the insufficient osseous corridors. AxWS2 may predict the possibility of TITS screw fixation and be used as the new indicator to discriminate the sacral dysmorphism. The conventional CT images of eighty-two cadaveric pelvis imported into Mimics® software to reconstruct three-dimensional (3D) models. A 7.0 mm-sized screw was processed into a 3D model using a 3D-sensor at actual size and virtually implanted as S1 and S2 TITS screw using Mimics® software. The cortical violation around screw path was evaluated using 3D biplanar and conventional CT images. The osseous corridor widths around TITS screws were measured in the axial plane images and defined as AxWS1 and AxWS2, respectively. Despite no cortical violation in S2 of all models, cortical violation of S1 TITS screw was found in 20 models. Of them, 14 models (impossible models) were identified in the 3D biplanar images, and all 20 models (CT-violation models) were identified only in CT axial plane images. AxWS1 was
ISSN:1877-0568
1877-0568
DOI:10.1016/j.otsr.2020.03.023