Impact of Aspiration Percutaneous Vertebroplasty in Reducing Bone Cement Leakage and Enhancing Distribution—An Ex Vivo Study in Goat Vertebrae

Hsin Tzu Lu, Jia Yi Lin, Yu Chuan Tsuei, Yung Fu Hsu, Chung Yi Chen, Shih Hao Cheng, William Chu*, Chuan Li, Woei Chyn Chu*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Osteoporosis-induced vertebral compression fracture (OVCF) occurs commonly in people over the age of 50, especially among menopausal women. Besides conservative therapy, minimally invasive percutaneous vertebroplasty (PVP) and kyphoplasty (PKP) have been widely used in clinical treatment and achieved good efficacy. However, the leakage of bone cement (CL) during vertebroplasty (PV) is a major risk that can cause (serious) complications such as compression of the spinal cord, pulmonary embolism, or even paraplegia. In this study, we introduced a new aspiration technique with standard PV procedures (APV) to ameliorate the risk of leakage with quantitative verifications of its effectiveness. APV intends to create a differential pressure to guide the direction of cement flow within the vertebrae. To test this technique, Nubian goats’ ex vivo vertebral bodies (VBs) were used to simulate the PV surgical process in humans. Results show that the proposed APV has a lower leakage rate of 13% compared to the 53% of conventional PV. Additionally, the APV approach achieves more uniform cement distribution via the 9-score method with a value of 7 ± 1.30 in contrast to 4 ± 1.78 by conventional PV.

Original languageEnglish
Article number795
JournalBioengineering
Volume10
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2023

Keywords

  • aspiration percutaneous vertebroplasty
  • bone cement leakage
  • cement distribution
  • osteoporotic vertebral compression fractures
  • percutaneous kyphoplasty
  • percutaneous vertebroplasty

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