Background: Pathological deformities involving the sagittal alignment of the spine may lead to loss of spine stability and imbalance. The effect of different patterns of sagittal balance on the loads acting in the spine was only marginally investigated, although it would be of critical importance in the clinical management of spinal disorders.Methods: Optimization-based finite element models of the human spine in the standing position able to predict the loads acting in the lumbar spine and the activation of the spinal muscles were developed and used to explore a wide range of sagittal balance conditions, covering both inter-subject variability and pathological imbalance. 1000 two-dimensional randomized spine models with simplified geometry were generated by varying anatomical parameters such as lumbar lordosis, sacral slope, and C7 plumb line. Muscular loads were calculated by means of an optimization procedure aimed to minimize total muscular stress.Findings: The simulation of a physiological spine in the standing position predicted average disk stresses ranging from 038 to 0.5 MPa, in good agreement with in vivo measurements. The C7 plumb line and the parameters describing the lumbar spine were found to be the strongest determinants of the lumbar loads and muscle activity. Marginal relevance was found concerning the thoracic and cervical parameters.Interpretation: The present modeling approach was found to be able to capture correlations between sagittal parameters and the loads acting in the lumbar spine. The method represents a good platform for future improvements aimed at patient-specific modeling to support pre-operative surgical planning. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Influence of sagittal balance on spinal lumbar loads: A numerical approach

Costa, F
Writing – Review & Editing
;
2013-01-01

Abstract

Background: Pathological deformities involving the sagittal alignment of the spine may lead to loss of spine stability and imbalance. The effect of different patterns of sagittal balance on the loads acting in the spine was only marginally investigated, although it would be of critical importance in the clinical management of spinal disorders.Methods: Optimization-based finite element models of the human spine in the standing position able to predict the loads acting in the lumbar spine and the activation of the spinal muscles were developed and used to explore a wide range of sagittal balance conditions, covering both inter-subject variability and pathological imbalance. 1000 two-dimensional randomized spine models with simplified geometry were generated by varying anatomical parameters such as lumbar lordosis, sacral slope, and C7 plumb line. Muscular loads were calculated by means of an optimization procedure aimed to minimize total muscular stress.Findings: The simulation of a physiological spine in the standing position predicted average disk stresses ranging from 038 to 0.5 MPa, in good agreement with in vivo measurements. The C7 plumb line and the parameters describing the lumbar spine were found to be the strongest determinants of the lumbar loads and muscle activity. Marginal relevance was found concerning the thoracic and cervical parameters.Interpretation: The present modeling approach was found to be able to capture correlations between sagittal parameters and the loads acting in the lumbar spine. The method represents a good platform for future improvements aimed at patient-specific modeling to support pre-operative surgical planning. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
2013
Sagittal balance
Spinal loads
Optimization
Finite element
Spinopelvic parameters
Spinal muscles
Finite Element Analysis
Humans
Intervertebral Disc
Lumbar Vertebrae
Muscle, Skeletal
Postural Balance
Spinal Diseases
Stress, Mechanical
Treatment Outcome
Weight-Bearing
Models, Biological
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11699/61576
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