Asian Spine Journal (Feb 2018)

Preventing Construct Subsidence Following Cervical Corpectomy: The Bump-stop Technique

  • Kenneth Aaron Shaw,
  • Matthew Griffith,
  • Edward T. Mottern,
  • David M. Gloystein,
  • John G. Devine

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4184/asj.2018.12.1.156
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 156 – 161

Abstract

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Cervical corpectomy is a viable technique for the treatment of multilevel cervical spine pathology. Despite multiple advances in both surgical technique and implant technology, the rate of construct subsidence can range from 6% for single-level procedures to 71% for multilevel procedures. In this technical note, we describe a novel technique, the bump-stop technique, for cervical corpectomy. The technique positions the superior and inferior screw holes such that the vertebral bodies bisect them. This allows for fixation in the dense cortical bone of the endplate while providing a buttress to corpectomy cage subsidence. We then discuss a retrospective case review of 24 consecutive patients, who were treated using this approach, demonstrating a lower than previously reported cage subsidence rate.

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