Bone graft substitutes for lumbar
spine fusion surgery
Bone graft for spine fusion surgery
There is a lot of interest in the spine community
to develop a bone graft substitute to use during
lumbar spinal fusion surgery procedures. This
would eliminate the need to harvest the patient’s
own bone, thus potentially reducing the risk
and pain associated with the procedure and hopefully
leading to a more reliable result (e.g. higher
fusion rates).
Spinal fusion surgery entails stopping the motion
at a painful motion segment (the joint formed
by two vertebral bodies). The theory is that
if the joint does not move, it will not create
pain. The fusion itself is achieved placing bone
along or in between the vertebral bodies. As
the bone grows, it fuses the vertebrae together
and eliminates the motion at that segment of
the spine.
Issues with current bone graft procedures for spine fusion
The gold standard for bone graft used for
lumbar spine fusion has been bone harvested from
the patient’s pelvis, which is a surgical
procedure performed at the time of the spine
fusion surgery.
There are two main potential problems with harvesting
bone from the patient’s pelvis:
- Graft site morbidity
Taking the bone graft from the patient’s
pelvis is a surgical procedure. With proper
surgical techniques, bone graft site morbidity
can be decreased (see surgical techniques under
bone grafts). There is, however, always the
potential for a complication. Some of these
potential complications include bleeding, infection,
and chronic pain at the donor site.
- Failure to fuse (pseudoarthrosis or nonunion)
Even if the spine fusion operation is performed
correctly, not every patient will obtain a
solid fusion. Spinal instrumentation has to
some extent reduced the risk of not getting
a solid fusion, but there are some patients
who are still at high risk for a pseudoarthrosis
(e.g. patients who have had multiple spine
surgeries, who are obese, who smoke, or are
having a multilevel spine fusion).
The above two issues, graft site morbidity and
failure to fuse, are the two primary reasons
there has been a great deal of interest in creating
a bone graft substitute for use in a spine fusion
procedure instead of using the patient’s
own bone.
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