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Specialty Update   |    
What’s New in Spine Surgery
Jack E. Zigler, MD; Paul A. Anderson, MD; Keith Bridwell, MD; Alexander Vaccaro, MD
View Disclosures and Other Information
Jack E. Zigler, MD
Texas Back Institute, 6300 West Parker Road, Plano, TX 75093

Paul A. Anderson, MD
Orthopaedics International, 1600 East Jefferson, Suite 400, Seattle, WA 98122

Keith Bridwell, MD
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine, One Barnes-Jewish Hospital Plaza, Suite 11300, West Pavilion, St. Louis, MO 63110

Alexander Vaccaro, MD
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Rothman Institute at Jefferson, 925 Chestnut Street, 5th Floor, Philadelphia, PA 19107

The authors did not receive grants or outside funding in support of their research or preparation of this manuscript. They did not receive payments or other benefits or a commitment or agreement to provide such benefits from a commercial entity. No commercial entity paid or directed, or agreed to pay or direct, any benefits to any research fund, foundation, educational institution, or other charitable or nonprofit organization with which the authors are affiliated or associated.

Specialty Update has been developed in collaboration with the Council of Musculoskeletal Specialty Societies (COMSS) of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.

The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery.  2001; 83:1285-1292 
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In the last twenty years, spine surgery as a subspecialty of orthopaedic surgery has enjoyed an explosion of interest. In 1981, fewer than fifteen spine fellowships were available. By 2000, more than 200 post-residency opportunities were available for training related to the spine. Four spine societies are members of the Council of Musculoskeletal Specialty Societies, which reports to the board of directors of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons. These four societies—the American Spinal Injury Association, the Cervical Spine Research Society, the North American Spine Society, and the Scoliosis Research Society—also form the Federation of Spine Associations, which is charged with coordinating the spine program for Specialty Day at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.
These four spine societies attract members with further subspecialized interests, as reflected in the focus of their research and practice. Spinal cord injury, the cervical spine, the lumbar spine, and spine deformities are foci of concentration at the individual society meetings, although some overlap in topics is inevitable and even encouraged. Neurosurgically trained spine surgeons are eligible for membership in these societies, and some physicians believe that a well-trained spine surgeon can come from either discipline, provided that the level of education and expertise is appropriate.
This update will highlight the various subspecialties of the spine, incorporating information from presentations made at the 2001 American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons annual meeting (including Specialty Day) as well as at the annual meetings of the four subspecialty societies mentioned above. Major contributions published in The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery and Spine during the year 2000 will also be discussed.
Spine surgery remains a dynamic subspecialty, with major advances being made every year. Ongoing research in spinal cord regeneration, disc replacement, endoscopic surgery, and biological adjuncts to bone-healing are all having an impact on spine surgery. Improvements in implant design, and unique ways to introduce these implants, are constantly evolving.
International cooperation in the sharing of advances has allowed more rapid dissemination of ideas and experiences. The North American Spine Society sponsors a formal meeting in conjunction with the Japanese Spine Research Society every other year; the latest meeting was held in Hawaii in July 2000. The Scoliosis Research Society frequently holds its annual meeting abroad to encourage international participation. The Cervical Spine Research Society has corresponding and European members in seventeen foreign countries. The American Spinal Injury Association is planning its 2002 meeting in Canada in conjunction with the International Medical Society of Paraplegia and its 2003 annual meeting in Miami in conjunction with the Brazilian Spinal Injury Association. This trend toward the international pooling of ideas and experiences will undoubtedly increase over time.

Surgical Anatomy

Complications of anterior cervical spine surgery, such as airway compromise, vocal cord involvement secondary to recurrent laryngeal and superior laryngeal neurapraxias, and dysphagia, have all been studied extensively1. Attention to anatomy during dissection, careful retraction during surgery, and vigilance postoperatively can help to minimize these complications. Risk factors for postoperative airway complications include obesity, a prolonged operative time, asthma, and an extensive longitudinal exposure. Patients with any of these risk factors should be left intubated overnight and should be extubated only after they have met clearly defined extubation criteria.
The sympathetic trunk may be more vulnerable to damage during lower anterior cervical approaches because it is more medially located within the longus colli muscle at the sixth cervical level than it is at the third cervical level.

Atlantoaxial Fixation

Atlantoaxial arthrodesis (arthrodesis of the first and second cervical vertebrae) remains a focus of research since posterior arthrodesis at this level is not associated with the high success rate of subaxial arthrodesis. Transarticular screws, inserted according to the method described by Magerl, are biomechanically quite strong and lead to impressive rates of fusion when combined with conventional interspinous wiring and bone-grafting. However, placement of these screws is dangerous; complications include vertebral artery injury leading to stroke or death, particularly in patients with unusual anatomy. Lateral mass screws inserted in the first cervical vertebra (to a maximum depth of 3.5 mm), coupled with pedicle screws inserted in the second cervical vertebra, may allow rod fixation and may supplant Magerl screws in patients in whom a classic posterior fusion is inadequate2.

Laminaplasty

Several Japanese authors have reported on neck and shoulder pain after cervical laminaplasty. Axial pain was found in 60% of these patients. Factors contributing to chronic pain were a prolonged operative time and denervation of or damage to the cervical facet joints. Better surgical techniques may decrease these problems.
Aita et al., in a prospective study of twenty-six patients who were followed for an average of 6.7 years, found that laminaplasty decreased lordosis and straightened the cervical spine. The decrease in both range of motion and lordosis continued at diminishing rates from the third through the fifth postoperative year.

Lateral Mass Plates

Posterior lateral mass screws can be used in the cervical spine for stabilization as well as for improving fusion rates. Bicortical screws have been associated with vertebral artery and nerve-root injuries. Several authors have described unilateral screw fixation of lateral mass plates as a safe and effective technique. This method offers a theoretical advantage compared with interspinous wiring since it resists extension forces.

Natural History

In 1986, Donald Gore of Sheboygan, Wisconsin, reported the magnetic resonance imaging findings in a population of 200 asymptomatic patients. Of the 159 patients who were available at the ten-year follow-up, only 15% had neck pain and only one had required surgery for radiculopathy. The presence of degenerative change at the level between the sixth and seventh cervical vertebrae was found to be an important predictor of the development of neck pain.

Anterior Cervical Plates

Wang et al. followed sixty patients for an average of 2.7 years after a two-level anterior cervical arthrodesis, performed either with plates (thirty-two patients) or without them (twenty-eight patients). All of the patients who were treated with plates had fusion, whereas 25% of the patients who were treated without plates had a pseudarthrosis. The use of plates did not appreciably increase the rate of complications.
In a study by DiAngelo et al., in vitro testing demonstrated that multilevel anterior plates increased stiffness and decreased local motion of the cervical spine after corpectomy. However, anterior plates reverse the graft loads and may load the graft excessively in extension, thereby promoting failure of multilevel constructs unless they are protected by posterior fixation.
Bolesta and Rechtine reported an unacceptably high rate of pseudarthrosis (53%) after three and four-level anterior cervical discectomy and arthrodesis with anterior fixation alone.

Cervical Myelopathy

Surgical and nonsurgical treatment of cervical spondylotic myelopathy were compared, by an independent reviewer, in a prospective, multicenter study that was funded by the Cervical Spine Research Society. The surgically treated patients had better outcomes. Neurologic and nonneurologic symptoms, as well as functional outcomes, were assessed.
Newey et al. reported on the long-term outcomes of the natural history of central cord syndrome. At an average follow-up of 8.6 years, survival and function were better in younger patients. Patients who were less than fifty years old at the time of injury had a far better functional result than did those who were more than seventy years old.
In patients with mild cervical myelopathy, increased signal intensity on magnetic resonance imaging of the cord has not been demonstrated to be a prognostic factor for a poor outcome or for the severity of the myelopathy.

Cervical Fusion Cages

Hacker et al., in a multicenter evaluation, reported that the outcomes associated with use of a BAK/C cage were the same as those associated with anterior cervical discectomy and fusion performed without instrumentation. However, an in vitro study by Wilke et al. demonstrated marked subsidence of three different cervical interbody implants (the BAK/C, WING, and Acromed cages).

Idiopathic Scoliosis

Studies at two centers, headed by Carol Weiss in Dallas and Nancy Hadley Miller in Baltimore, are focusing on the genetic pattern of idiopathic scoliosis inheritance and providing ongoing insight into the etiology of this disease3. Tom Lowe has investigated the correlation between increasing platelet calmodulin levels and curve progression in idiopathic scoliosis. Ultimately, calmodulin may serve as a biological marker for identifying patients who are at risk for curve progression and those who are not.
Most reports on the surgical treatment of idiopathic scoliosis have centered on the use of pedicle screws, on selective anterior instrumentation and fusion, and on complications. Suk et al., Polly et al., and O’Brien et al. demonstrated that, in experienced hands, pedicle screws can be placed safely in the thoracic spine in children with deformity. Suk et al. also reported on the safety of this technique in patients less than ten years old. It is clear that this is a technically demanding procedure that requires more precision than the placement of lumbar pedicle screws does.
Investigators from several centers have reported satisfactory results with use of a single anterior solid rod for the treatment of isolated thoracolumbar, lumbar, and thoracic idiopathic scoliosis. The rates of complications and pseudarthrosis have been low. One group correlated pseudarthrosis with smoking, thoracic hyperkyphosis, and larger adolescent body size. However, Clements et al. reported that, in patients with hyperkyphotic thoracic deformity, posterior instrumentation was better than anterior instrumentation for control in the sagittal plane.

Adult Spinal Deformity

Pedicle subtraction osteotomy for the treatment of fixed sagittal imbalance continues to gain support and interest. Reports from St. Louis and San Francisco have demonstrated promising clinical and radiographic results with use of this technique. Lee et al. reported a correlation among sagittal imbalance, reduced lumbar lordosis, and pelvic tilt. There is increasing interest in pelvic tilt and pelvic incidence (the relationship between the pelvis, the hip joints, the sacrum, and the lumbar spine) at centers throughout the world.

High-Grade Spondylolisthesis

In the past, there has been concern that complete reduction of very high-grade spondylolisthesis leads to a substantial rate of neurologic deficits of both the fifth lumbar and the sacral nerve roots. Presentations from the Hospital for Special Surgery and the University of California at San Francisco focused on techniques associated with partial reduction, through placement of either sacral screws into the fifth lumbar vertebral body or fibular dowel grafts from the sacrum into the fifth lumbar vertebral body, or both. Although both series were small, these techniques may be an alternative for patients with grade-4 or 5 spondylolisthesis who have a very high-degree slip angle and inferior displacement of the fifth lumbar vertebra relative to the top of the sacrum.

Congenital Scoliosis

Hemivertebral resection in the thoracic and lumbar spine is a valuable surgical treatment for certain congenital deformities. The resection can be performed through separate anterior and posterior approaches or, in some cases, through a posterior approach only. There is concern that circumferential fusion in very young patients might limit development of the spinal canal. However, a presentation from Karlsbad, Germany, indicated that circumferential fusion and the use of pedicle screws did not narrow the spinal canal in these patients.

Spinal Fusion

Guo et al. reported dramatically increased expression of recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-4 during fracture-healing. Cunningham et al. found that recombinant human osteogenic protein-1 (OP-1) (rhBMP-7) offered definite advantages as a posterolateral bone-graft substitute and expander in a coonhound model. Riew et al., using a rabbit model, showed that cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitors did not inhibit fusion as substantially as did indomethacin. Those authors also described a technique of thoracoscopic intradiscal spinal fusion in pigs in which they used gene therapy to deliver bone morphogenetic protein-2 to the fusion site.

Sacral Pelvic Fixation

Alegre et al. showed a substantial decrease in the flexion-extension moment on the screw at the first sacral level when long posterior constructs were extended either to the ilium or to a screw at the second sacral level. Schwend et al. reported on an alternative to the Galveston technique. Clinical investigators at the University of California at San Francisco and at Washington University in St. Louis reported the results of iliac-screw fixation. Bilateral fixation with screws at the first sacral level and the ilium provided a predictable rate of fusion, with the main complication being prominence of the iliac screws. The Washington University group found this method to be particularly helpful in patients having a revision4.

Innovative Techniques

George Picetti, in a study of fifty patients with thoracic idiopathic adolescent scoliosis, reported the results of endoscopic fusion and instrumentation after twenty-four to forty-one months of follow-up. This technique is presently being investigated at several centers. Picetti found an unacceptably high rate of pseudarthrosis (nine of nine patients, including two patients who had a rod fracture) after treatment with Grafton alone. In comparison, only one of the patients who had an arthrodesis with use of rib graft had a pseudarthrosis. Many centers have shown that it is feasible to perform endoscopic discectomy in conjunction with bone-grafting and instrumentation. However, a longer duration of follow-up will be needed to determine the ultimate rate of pseudarthrosis.
Management of progressive deformities in very young and very small children remains an area of intensive investigation. It is still not known whether there are feasible ways of controlling the deformity without fusing the spine. Robert Campbell and colleagues reported on a variety of methods for treating "thoracic insufficiency syndrome," all of which centered on performing an opening-wedge thoracostomy and then applying a chest-wall distractor. Sarwark et al. reported the results of subtraction/decancellation vertebrectomy in patients with kyphosis due to myelomeningocele. John Braun and James Ogilvie described a very promising experimental scoliosis model in immature goats; this model should allow further study of various treatment options in very skeletally immature patients with spinal deformity. Wall et al., using an immature-pig model, reported the results of endoscopic stapling for the treatment of infantile and juvenile adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. Thompson et al. described the use of "growing rods" for skeletally immature patients with paralytic scoliosis.
Richard Lindseth devised a technique for anterior vertebral osteotomy that is designed to preserve lumbar motion and to correct idiopathic lumbar scoliosis without fusion. This technique was used in seventeen patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis who had a lumbar curve. A substantial correction in the coronal plane was achieved and maintained in these patients.
Although immobilization of a vertebral spinal unit may be effective in some circumstances, appropriate patient selection, choice of the optimum disc spacer, and decisions regarding levels of treatment are all current topics of discussion in the field of lumbar degenerative disc disease. Other contemporary topics of interest include the use of minimally invasive therapeutic procedures such as intradiscal electrothermal therapy for the treatment of internal disc derangement, lumbar artificial disc replacement, and gene therapy to promote bone fusion and intervertebral disc regeneration.

Interbody Fusion

Many clinicians believe that interbody fusion is the most reliable technique available for relieving disabling pain due to lumbar internal disc derangement or degenerative disc disease in appropriately selected patients who have had failure of conservative treatment. This may be accomplished by anterior, posterior, or transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion.
Interbody fusion is biomechanically superior to traditional posterolateral intertransverse-process arthrodesis in providing axial support, and the number of such procedures has increased substantially. To date, however, there have been no controlled, prospective, randomized class-I trials, and there have been few unbiased prospective class-II trials for evaluating the efficacy of either cylindrical or impacted (trapezoidal or ramped) devices used to facilitate these fusions.
Cages of all forms are currently being used for the treatment of degenerative disease, trauma, and deformity, with good rates of success. Shaffrey discussed the clinical misapplication of these devices as well as their high failure rates when they are used over multiple segments or in the presence of major circumferential instability5. Reasons for interbody cage failure, which have been analyzed in several studies, include: (1) the use of undersized cages, leading to inadequate vertebral distraction; (2) cage subsidence in patients with poor bone quality; (3) failure of fusion in patients with segmental instability (spondylolisthesis), poor implant-host bone contact, or multilevel arthrodesis; (4) use of anterior stand-alone cages in tall disc spaces; and (5) technical errors, such as improper cage placement, incorrect cage size, excessive end-plate and facet-joint removal, and lack of adequate amounts of bone graft.
Some complications related to cage application are approach-specific. Complications related to the anterior approach include retrograde ejaculation (reported in 4% to 8% of male patients), visceral and vascular injury, and the potential for an incisional hernia. Complications related to the posterior approach include paraspinal muscle denervation, dural laceration, and persistent leg pain due to neural stretch injuries.
Zdeblick and David compared laparoscopic and mini-open anterior approaches for fusion procedures involving the fourth and fifth lumbar vertebrae; threaded cylindrical metallic cages were used in both approaches. They found no substantial differences between the two groups in terms of operating time, blood loss, or length of hospital stay. The rate of complications was substantially higher in the group treated with the laparoscopic approach than it was in the group treated with the mini-open approach (20% compared with 4%). Zdeblick and David concluded that there was no compelling advantage that would warrant use of the laparoscopic approach for fusion of the fourth and fifth lumbar vertebrae, and the senior author (Zdeblick) now uses the mini-open approach exclusively at this level. Regan analyzed the rate of complications in 127 consecutive patients who had undergone laparoscopic anterior lumbar interbody fusion. He reported four cage-related failures that led to reoperation because of symptomatic nerve-root compression, four cases of retrograde ejaculation (a prevalence of 4.8% among male patients), and two conversions to open procedures because of excessive bleeding. There were seventeen major complications (a prevalence of 13.4%), mostly in the first forty patients.
Posterior lumbar interbody fusion allows decompression of neural structures as well as interbody fusion and segmental stabilization with either transpedicular or transfacet instrumentation, all through one incision. The theoretical advantages of anterior lumbar interbody fusion include better anterior-column support due to maximization of the end-plate contact surface, better direct visualization, improved restoration of lordosis, lack of trauma to the posterior paraspinal musculature, and technical ease. To date, there are no clinical data on humans that would allow a comparison of the efficacy of various cage designs or of different approaches to their application.
Transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion is a newer alternative to current techniques of posterior lumbar interbody fusion. It involves a more lateralized posterolateral entry to the interbody space through resection of the superior and inferior articular processes of the involved level. There is concern about the overall stability of the construct because the procedure involves removal of both facet joints for bilateral cage placement6.

Genetic Therapy and Spinal Applications

Several products have emerged in the last two years for use as bone-graft extenders. Demineralized bone matrices have demonstrated osteoinductivity in animal models. Several osteoconductive matrices (allograft cancellous chips, cortical spacers, ceramic graft extenders, and coral) have been used with varying success in human clinical series.
Genetic tissue-engineering has led to the development of two human recombinant bone morphogenetic proteins, osteogenic protein-1 (OP-1) (rhBMP-7) and recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein-2 (rhBMP-2). Grauer et al., using a rabbit model of intertransverse-process lumbar fusion, compared three different groups: autograft alone, carrier alone, and carrier with osteogenic protein-1. At five weeks, five of the eight rabbits in the autograft group, none of the eight rabbits in the carrier-only group, and all eight rabbits in the osteogenic protein-1 group had a solid fusion on manual palpation. Biomechanical results supported the presence of a solid fusion, which correlated with the radiographic findings. Histological testing demonstrated that the fusion masses in the animals that had been treated with autograft were composed primarily of fibrocartilage while those in the animals that had been treated with osteogenic protein-1 demonstrated predominantly maturing bone7.
Boden et al. reported the results of a prospective, randomized, controlled clinical trial of patients who had been treated with an interbody fusion cage filled with rhBMP-28. Fourteen patients with single-level lumbar degenerative disc disease that had been refractory to prolonged conservative treatment randomly underwent a lumbar interbody arthrodesis with use of a tapered cylindrical threaded cage filled with either rhBMP-2 on a collagen sponge (eleven patients) or autologous bone graft (three controls). The patients and controls were evaluated at six, twelve, and twenty-four months postoperatively with use of radiographs interpreted by three independent radiologists and with the Oswestry Low Back Pain Disability Questionnaire. All of the patients who had been treated with rhBMP-2 had a solid fusion compared with two of the three controls. The rhBMP-2 group had improved scores on the questionnaire at three months, but both groups had similar scores at twelve months. Boden et al. concluded that there was consistent and unequivocal osteoinduction by a recombinant growth factor in this fusion model.
Investigators have cultured cells from both the anulus fibrosus and the nucleus pulposus in vitro. Osteogenic protein-1 has stimulated these cells to grow and to produce cell-associated matrix through exogenous stimulation. The purpose of this research is to alter the disc-degeneration cascade in order to decrease associated pain syndromes that occur with the aging process. Matsumoto et al. reported the results of gene therapy with use of a viral (adenovirus) vector to introduce genes responsible for the production of specific growth factors into the intervertebral disc9. These growth factors can stimulate proteoglycan synthesis and may soon be able to be produced in vivo through these genetic modification techniques.

Intradiscal Electrothermal Therapy

Saal and Saal prospectively evaluated sixty-two patients who underwent intradiscal electrothermal therapy for chronic discogenic low-back pain10. The patients had had the pain for an average of sixty months and were followed for an average of sixteen months postoperatively. Various patient questionnaires demonstrated that 81% of the patients had a decrease in pain while 19% had no improvement. Karasek and Bogduk also reported a dramatic reduction in pain in patients with internal disc derangement who were treated with this procedure11. Wetzel et al. reported only a 6.9% failure rate in their patient population. The exact mechanism resulting in pain relief is unknown. A recent study of human cadavera indicated that the thermal probe used in intradiscal electrothermal therapy produced a maximum temperature of 64.0°C within 1 to 2 mm of the catheter and that less than 5% of the discal surface area achieved temperatures sufficient for collagen denaturation.

Lumbar Intervertebral Disc Replacement

Batterjee et al. reported on seventeen patients who had received a Prosthetic Disc Nucleus (PDN) for degenerative disc disease after conservative treatment had failed. This implant, which is composed of a hydrogel core encased in a high-molecular-weight polyethylene jacket, has been shown to mimic the shrinking and swelling behavior of the healthy disc during loading and unloading of the spine. Batterjee et al. found that, after two years of follow-up, most patients had a decrease in low back pain and an increase in range of motion as evidenced by improvements in the scores on the Oswestry Low Back Pain Disability Questionnaire and the visual analog scale.
Kotani et al. described an artificial intervertebral disc prosthesis consisting of a triaxial three-dimensional fabric combined with ultra-high-molecular-weight polyethylene fiber with spray-coated bioactive ceramics on the surface. Histological examination in a sheep model demonstrated biological bonding of the three-dimensional fabric discs to the vertebral end plates, and biomechanical testing showed preservation of segmental spinal mobility. Marnay et al. reported the eight-to-ten-year results following disc replacement with an implant composed of Plasmapore-covered keeled titanium plates with an inner concave polyethylene dome. The prosthesis was placed at three levels in three patients, at two levels in twenty patients, and at one level in twenty-one patients. All patients had had at least ten years of low-back pain that had been refractory to conservative treatment. Overall, thirty-four (77%) of the patients had an excellent or good result and four (9%) had a poor result. At the time of the last examination, none of the prostheses had been removed, their mobility remained functional without bone resorption, and good integration was visualized on computed tomography scanning.

Spinal Trauma

Wood et al. performed a very well-done prospective, randomized study comparing operative with nonoperative treatment of "stable" thoracolumbar burst fractures without neurologic deficit. Fifty-five consecutive patients were enrolled over a five-year period, and the average duration of follow-up was forty-seven months. No substantial long-term advantage was found to be associated with operative treatment of these fractures.

Summary

Recent major advances may ultimately change the way that we treat lumbar degenerative disease. These advances have included the application of minimally invasive heating catheters to alter the collagen matrix of the disc, newer interbody fusion techniques, intervertebral disc replacement, and tissue-engineering designed to develop bone-graft substitutes that hold the potential for improved fusion rates as well as techniques leading to discal repair and regeneration. As with all innovations, careful, prospective, long-term trials need to be undertaken in order to understand the benefits and shortcomings associated with each.
In the past decade, spinal cord injury research has focused on the understanding of posttraumatic cellular events, the development of neuroprotective agents, mechanical neural repair by nerve-grafting, and repair through the use of molecular technology. Although the early results are promising, the cure for spinal cord injury appears to be years away. The purpose of this section is to review recent advances in the understanding of the pathophysiology of spinal cord injury and the effectiveness of novel neuroprotective agents.

Pathophysiology of Injury

The spinal cord may sustain several stages of injury. The first, or primary, injury is the direct trauma that usually is due to impingement of bone and disc fragments or to stretching by distraction or hyperflexion. The degree of neuronal injury is directly related to the transferred kinetic injury. Histologic examination immediately following injury often shows only small petechial hemorrhage and little disruption of axonal fibers. However, over the next six to twenty-four hours, progressive necrosis occurs in the zone of injury of the gray matter and then in the white axonal tracts. This late necrosis has been called the secondary injury. For the past two decades, most of the research on spinal cord injury has focused on understanding these mechanisms and devising treatments for the secondary injury. Diminished vascular perfusion, alterations in biomechanics, adverse biochemical cascades, and molecular and cellular events are all components of the secondary injury.
Following spinal cord injury, there is failure of axonal repolarization due to alteration of sodium, potassium, and calcium channels. Intracellular and intramitochondrial Ca++ accumulates, thereby uncoupling oxidative phosphorylation. When adenosine triphosphate production fails, cellular death ensues. Intracellular Ca++ activates phospholipase A2, causing breakdown of myelin and of the neuronal cell membrane. Oxygen free radicals are formed, leading to destructive lipid peroxidation reactions. Cellular inflammation is initiated, leading to the release of destructive enzymes. Inadequate tissue perfusion from low systemic blood pressure, loss of spinal cord autoregulation, and intramedullary vascular injury worsen these cellular events.

Pharmacologic Interventions

The National Acute Spinal Cord Injury Studies II and III, in which high-dose methylprednisolone was investigated for use as an antioxidant, demonstrated a modest improvement in neurologic recovery when this agent was administered within eight hours after injury. Hurlbert reanalyzed the data from these two studies and did not find a significant relationship between recovery and use of methylprednisolone at the one-year follow-up interval12. Even worse, there was a sixfold increase in pulmonary deaths in patients who had received methylprednisolone for forty-eight hours compared with those who had received it for twenty-four hours. Coleman et al. reviewed the data from the same studies and drew similar conclusions: that the statistical methods that had been used were questionable, that the benefit of methylprednisolone was minimal or nonexistent, and that a reappraisal of methylprednisolone as a standard of care is warranted13.
Matsumoto et al. reported on the complications of high-dose methylprednisolone in a randomized, double-blind study14. Forty-six patients with an acute injury (an injury sustained less than eight hours before presentation) were treated with either methylprednisolone (twenty-three patients) or a placebo (twenty-three patients). Pulmonary complications occurred in eight of the patients who had been treated with methylprednisolone compared with only one of the patients who had received the placebo. Similarly, gastrointestinal complications occurred in four of the patients who had been treated with methylprednisolone compared with none of the patients who had received the placebo. These findings were similar to those reported in the National Acute Spinal Cord Injury Studies II and III, but they were minimized in those reports.
Traumatic brain injury or ischemia results in the release of excitatory amino acids such as glutamate and aspartate. Overstimulation of glutamate receptors by excitatory amino acids can initiate processes that ultimately lead to neuronal death. This process is termed excitotoxicity. Antagonists to the N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor, such as gacyclidine, have shown promise as neuroprotective agents in closed head injuries. Both Gaviria and Feldblum demonstrated a positive time-dependent, dose-dependent relationship between use of gacyclidine and attenuation of spinal cord injury. These studies highlight the importance of understanding the cellular mechanisms of secondary injury and developing strategies that address these adverse processes.
Melatonin is the hormone produced by the pineal gland. It is a powerful free oxygen radical scavenger that penetrates intracellularly and has an important role in protecting intracellular organelles, including the nucleus. Fujimoto demonstrated a substantial neuroprotective effect when melatonin was administered from zero to four hours after spinal cord injury in a rat model. Kaptanoglu compared melatonin with methylprednisolone, also in a rat model, and found decreased free radical formation to baseline in both groups. However, ultrastructural changes were more significantly limited by melatonin. Other antioxidants, such as EPC-K1, a phosphate-diester linkage of vitamins E and C, have also been shown to attenuate spinal cord injury.

Spinal Cord-Cooling

Hypothermia and spinal cord-cooling have long been proposed as neuroprotective methods. Diminished temperature is theorized to decrease the inflammatory response of the injured area. With less polymorphonuclear leukocyte accumulation, there is decreased activation of destructive enzymes. Other protective mechanisms of hypothermia include diminished release of excitatory amino acids, decreased free radical formation, and improved energy metabolism. Cord-cooling applied locally by laminectomy has fallen out of favor because of the instability created by the laminectomy, the difficulty in temperature control, and poor outcomes. Systemic hypothermia has been utilized successfully as a tissue-protective measure during cardiac and neurosurgical procedures. Several studies have been performed to evaluate its use in patients with spinal cord injury.
Chatzipanteli evaluated the effect of mild central hypothermia (32°C) on injured spinal cords and found a decrease in polymorphonuclear leukocytes and enzymatic activity. Yu, using a rat contusion model, found that epidural temperature decreased with mild systemic hypothermia (21° to 22°C). In addition, the rats that were treated with hypothermia had a better neurologic outcome and fewer histologic changes following injury than did the controls.
Dimar et al. reported the results of local spinal cord-cooling in a rat model. Local hypothermia to 19°C was applied for two hours with use of a specially designed frame15. Animals with a moderate incomplete injury (but not those with a severe cord injury) showed a significant improvement compared with controls15.

Summary

Research on spinal cord injury is rapidly increasing our understanding of the cellular and biochemical effects leading to secondary injury. So-called designer medications that affect individual cell-membrane receptors or ion-exchange channels and prevent cellular events such as apoptosis appear to be neuroprotective. Mild systemic hypothermia is also a promising therapy. However, these strategies are only useful around the time of injury. Prevention of these injuries has received surprisingly little emphasis in the orthopaedic literature and is clearly the best strategy. For patients with permanent deficits, regeneration or repair—"The Cure"—is higly anticipated. Unfortunately, these investigations are proceeding slowly, but they do show promise at this time.
The annual meeting of the American Spinal Injury Association will be held on May 3 through 6, 2002, at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It will be presented in conjunction (for the first time) with the annual meeting of the International Medical Society of Paraplegia.
The 2002 annual meeting of the Cervical Spine Research Society will be held at the Fountainebleau Hilton, Miami Beach, Florida, on December 5, 6, and 7. There will not be an Instructional Course for this meeting.
The annual meeting of the North American Spine Society will be held on October 30 through November 2, 2002, in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. The Meeting of the Americas II, a combined meeting with the North American Spine Society, the Latin American Spine Society, and the Brazilian Spine Society, will be held in the spring of 2002 (location to be determined).
The annual meeting of the Scoliosis Research Society will be held on September 19, 20, and 21, 2002, in Seattle, Washington. Fundamentals of Spine Deformity—Part 2 will be held on September 18 in Seattle. The 2002 International Meeting on Advanced Spine Techniques will be announced later this year.
The Federation of Spine Associations will present the spine program at Specialty Day on February 16, 2002, during the annual meeting of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons in Dallas, Texas.
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Shaffrey CI. Indications for threaded interbody devices. Read at the Annual Meeting of the Federation of Spine Associations; 2001 Mar 3; San Francisco, CA. 
 
Savas PEHarris BMHilibrand ASPelligrino AVaccaro ARAlbert TJSiegler S. Transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion: the effect of various instrumentation techniques. Read at the Annual Meeting of the North American Spine Society; 2000 Oct 25-28; New Orleans, LA.  
 
Grauer JN, Patel TC, Erulkar JS, Troiano NW, Panjabi MM,Friedlaender GE. Evaluation of OP-1 as a graft substitute for intertransverse process lumbar fusion. Spine,2001;26: 127-33. 26127  2001  [PubMed]
 
Boden SD, Zdeblick TA, Sandhu HS,Heim SE. The use of rhBMP-2 in interbody fusion cages. Definitive evidence of osteoinduction in humans: a preliminary report. Spine,2000;25: 376-81. 25376  2000  [PubMed]
 
Matsumoto TMasuda KAn HSAndersson GBJRueger DCNatick MAThonar EJ. Tissue engineered intervertebral disc: enhancement of formation with osteogenic protein-1. Read at the Annual Meeting of the North American Spine Society; 2000 Oct 25-28; New OrleansLA. 
 
Saal JA,Saal JS. Intradiscal electrothermal treatment for chronic discogenic low back pain: a prospective outcome study with minimum 1-year follow-up. Spine,2000;25: 2622-7. 252622  2000  [PubMed]
 
Karasek M,Bogduk N. Twelve-month follow-up of a controlled trial of intradiscal thermal anuloplasty for back pain due to internal disc disruption. Spine,2000;25: 2601-7. 252601  2000  [PubMed]
 
Hurlbert RJ. Methylprednisolone for acute spinal cord injury: an inappropriate standard of care. J Neurosurg,2000;93: 1-7. 931  2000  [PubMed]
 
Coleman WP, Benzel D,Cahill DWDucker TGeisler FGreen BGropper MRGoffin JMadsen PW 3rdMaiman DJOndra SLRosner MSasso RCTrost GRZeidman S. A critical appraisal of the reporting of the National Acute Spinal Cord Injury Studies (II and III) of methylprednisolone in acute spinal cord injury. J Spinal Disord,2000;13: 185-99. 13185  2000  [PubMed]
 
Matsumoto T, Tamaki T, Kawakami M, Yoshida M, Ando M,Yamada H. Early complications of high-dose methylprednisolone sodium succinate treatment in the follow-up of acute cervical spinal cord injury. Spine. 2001;26: 426-30. 26426  Spine. 2001 
 
Dimar JR 2nd, Shields CB, Zhang YP, Burke DA, Raque GH,Glassman SD. The role of directly applied hypothermia in spinal cord injury. Spine. 2000;25: 2294-302. 252294  Spine. 2000 
 

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Topics

Apfelbaum RI, Kriskovich MD,Haller JR. On the incidence, cause, and prevention of recurrent laryngeal nerve palsies during anterior cervical spine surgery. Spine,2000;25: 2906-12. 252906  2000  [PubMed]
 
Panjabi MM, Shin EK, Chen NC,Wang JL. Internal morphology of human cervical pedicles. Spine,2000;25: 1197-205. 251197  2000  [PubMed]
 
Hadley Miller N. Spine update: genetics of familial idiopathic scoliosis. Spine,2000;25: 2416-8. 252416  2000  [PubMed]
 
Wilson-Holden TJ, Padberg AM, Parkinson JD, Bridwell KH, Lenke LG,Bassett GS. A prospective comparison of neurogenic mixed evoked potential stimulation methods: utility of epidural elicitation during posterior spinal surgery. Spine,2000;25: 2364-71. 252364  2000  [PubMed]
 
Shaffrey CI. Indications for threaded interbody devices. Read at the Annual Meeting of the Federation of Spine Associations; 2001 Mar 3; San Francisco, CA. 
 
Savas PEHarris BMHilibrand ASPelligrino AVaccaro ARAlbert TJSiegler S. Transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion: the effect of various instrumentation techniques. Read at the Annual Meeting of the North American Spine Society; 2000 Oct 25-28; New Orleans, LA.  
 
Grauer JN, Patel TC, Erulkar JS, Troiano NW, Panjabi MM,Friedlaender GE. Evaluation of OP-1 as a graft substitute for intertransverse process lumbar fusion. Spine,2001;26: 127-33. 26127  2001  [PubMed]
 
Boden SD, Zdeblick TA, Sandhu HS,Heim SE. The use of rhBMP-2 in interbody fusion cages. Definitive evidence of osteoinduction in humans: a preliminary report. Spine,2000;25: 376-81. 25376  2000  [PubMed]
 
Matsumoto TMasuda KAn HSAndersson GBJRueger DCNatick MAThonar EJ. Tissue engineered intervertebral disc: enhancement of formation with osteogenic protein-1. Read at the Annual Meeting of the North American Spine Society; 2000 Oct 25-28; New OrleansLA. 
 
Saal JA,Saal JS. Intradiscal electrothermal treatment for chronic discogenic low back pain: a prospective outcome study with minimum 1-year follow-up. Spine,2000;25: 2622-7. 252622  2000  [PubMed]
 
Karasek M,Bogduk N. Twelve-month follow-up of a controlled trial of intradiscal thermal anuloplasty for back pain due to internal disc disruption. Spine,2000;25: 2601-7. 252601  2000  [PubMed]
 
Hurlbert RJ. Methylprednisolone for acute spinal cord injury: an inappropriate standard of care. J Neurosurg,2000;93: 1-7. 931  2000  [PubMed]
 
Coleman WP, Benzel D,Cahill DWDucker TGeisler FGreen BGropper MRGoffin JMadsen PW 3rdMaiman DJOndra SLRosner MSasso RCTrost GRZeidman S. A critical appraisal of the reporting of the National Acute Spinal Cord Injury Studies (II and III) of methylprednisolone in acute spinal cord injury. J Spinal Disord,2000;13: 185-99. 13185  2000  [PubMed]
 
Matsumoto T, Tamaki T, Kawakami M, Yoshida M, Ando M,Yamada H. Early complications of high-dose methylprednisolone sodium succinate treatment in the follow-up of acute cervical spinal cord injury. Spine. 2001;26: 426-30. 26426  Spine. 2001 
 
Dimar JR 2nd, Shields CB, Zhang YP, Burke DA, Raque GH,Glassman SD. The role of directly applied hypothermia in spinal cord injury. Spine. 2000;25: 2294-302. 252294  Spine. 2000 
 
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