Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery (May 2018)

Sternal instability measured with radiostereometric analysis. A study of method feasibility, accuracy and precision

  • Rikke Falsig Vestergaard,
  • Kjeld Søballe,
  • John Michael Hasenkam,
  • Maiken Stilling

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13019-018-0735-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 5

Abstract

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Abstract Background A small, but unstable, saw-gap may hinder bone-bridging and induce development of painful sternal dehiscence. We propose the use of Radiostereometric Analysis (RSA) for evaluation of sternal instability and present a method validation. Methods Four bone analogs (phantoms) were sternotomized and tantalum beads were inserted in each half. The models were reunited with wire cerclage and placed in a radiolucent separation device. Stereoradiographs (n = 48) of the phantoms in 3 positions were recorded at 4 imposed separation points. The accuracy and precision was compared statistically and presented as translations along the 3 orthogonal axes. 7 sternotomized patients were evaluated for clinical RSA precision by double-examination stereoradiographs (n = 28). Results In the phantom study, we found no systematic error (p > 0.3) between the three phantom positions, and precision for evaluation of sternal separation was 0.02 mm. Phantom accuracy was mean 0.13 mm (SD 0.25). In the clinical study, we found a detection limit of 0.42 mm for sternal separation and of 2 mm for anterior-posterior dislocation of the sternal halves for the individual patient. Conclusion RSA is a precise and low-dose image modality feasible for clinical evaluation of sternal stability in research. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02738437, retrospectively registered.

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