Independent assessment of a new pedicle probe and its ability to detect pedicle breach: a cadaveric study

Phillip T. Guillen, Ryan G. Knopper, Jared Kroger, Nathaniel D. Wycliffe, Olumide A. Danisa, Wayne K. Cheng

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Object. The authors undertook an independent, non-industry funded cadaveric study to evaluate the efficacy of a pedicle-probing device, which uses impedance measurement to warn of impending and actual pedicle screw breach. Methods. A previously validated fresh-frozen cadaver model (saline-soaked spine) was used. Individuals at 3 levels of training (attending spine surgeon, orthopedic surgery resident, and medical student) used a cannulated pedicle-probing device to cannulate each of the levels between T-2 and S-1. Each pedicle was cannulated freehand using 2 approaches: 1) a standard trajectory through the middle of the pedicle, and 2) a medial trajectory aimed to breach the medial wall of the pedicle. A 16-slice helical CT scanner was used. The images were interpreted and analyzed by 2 orthopedic spine surgeons and a neuroradiologist. Results. The sensitivity of the pedicle probe to detect impending breach or breach of 4 mm or less was 90.06%. The sensitivity in detecting medial wall breach was 95.8%. The positive predictive value was 87.1%. The device detected medial breach more often than lateral breach. Conclusions. This study showed that this pedicle-probing device could reasonably be used to detect impending breach and actual breach of 4 mm or less. Medial breach was detected better than lateral breach. Use of the pedicle probe may improve patient safety.
    Original languageAmerican English
    Pages (from-to)821-825
    Number of pages5
    JournalJournal of Neurosurgery: Spine
    Volume21
    Issue number5
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Nov 1 2014

    ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

    • Surgery
    • Neurology
    • Clinical Neurology

    Keywords

    • Cadaveric study
    • PediGuard
    • Pedicle breach
    • Pedicle screw
    • Technique
    • Thoracic Vertebrae/diagnostic imaging
    • Lumbar Vertebrae/diagnostic imaging
    • Humans
    • Tomography, Spiral Computed
    • Neurosurgical Procedures
    • Spine/diagnostic imaging
    • Sensitivity and Specificity
    • Monitoring, Intraoperative/instrumentation
    • Sacrum/diagnostic imaging
    • Cadaver
    • Pedicle Screws/adverse effects

    Disciplines

    • Medicine and Health Sciences
    • Surgery

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