Kazuo Nakanishi
   Department   Kawasaki University of Medical Welfare  ,
   Position   Professor
Article types 原著
Language English
Peer review Peer reviewed
Title Efficiency of Long Lateral Mass Screws.
Journal Formal name:Journal of clinical medicine
Abbreviation:J Clin Med
ISSN code:20770383/20770383
Domestic / ForeginForegin
Volume, Issue, Page 11(7),pp.1953
Author and coauthor Seiya Watanabe, Kazuo Nakanishi, Kosuke Misaki, Kazuya Uchino, Hideaki Iba, Takachika Shimizu
Authorship 2nd author
Publication date 2022/03
Summary INTRODUCTION:Lateral mass screws (LMS) have been widely used for the posterior fusion of the cervical spine. Even though LMS are safe, the screws are short and postoperative fixation is uncertain. Therefore, we measured and reported a technique using long lateral mass screws (LLMS), a new method of screw insertion, using a Zed spine from LEXI (Tokyo, Japan).MATERIALS AND METHODS:In this study, we evaluated the outcomes of 35 patients who underwent surgery using LLMS at our hospital from 2019 to 2021. Operative time, blood loss, complications, inserted screw length, screw length based on gender differences, and screw deviation rate were evaluated. The Mann-Whitney U test was used to determine the gender differences in screw length. Screw deviation was evaluated by postoperative CT and a Zed spine to determine the screw insertion angle.RESULTS:The mean operative time was 185 ± 51 min (120-327 min), and the mean blood loss was 236 ± 316 g (10-1720 g). The total number of screws was 183. The screw length was 22.2 (16-28) mm for males and 20.8 (16-28) mm for females, with an average length of 21 ± 2.7 mm. No gender differences were observed in terms of screw length (p > 0.01 NS). The number of deviated screws above G3 was one in the third cervical vertebra, three in the fourth cervical vertebra, one in the fifth cervical vertebra, and one in the sixth cervical vertebra. The number of deviated screws was 6 out of 183, and the deviation rate was 3.2%.CONCLUSIONS:In this study, the LLMS deviation rate was 3.2%, and strong fixation was possible without any complications. We measured the screw length and screw deviation rate in cases in which LLMS were actually inserted.
DOI 10.3390/jcm11071953
PMID 35407561