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Finding the right fit: studying the biomechanics of under-tapping with varying thread depths and pitches
Authors:Ehsan Jazini,Carmen Petraglia,Mark Moldavsky,Oliver Tannous,Tristan Weir,Comron Saifi,Omar Elkassabany,Yiwei Cai,Brandon Bucklen,Joseph O&#x  Brien,Steven C. Ludwig
Affiliation:1. Department of Orthopaedics, University of Maryland, 110 South Paca St, Suite 300, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA;2. Musculoskeletal Education and Research Center, A Division of Globus Medical, Inc., 2560 General Armistead Ave, Audubon, PA 19403, USA;3. New York-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center, 622 West 168 St, New York, NY 10032, USA;4. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, George Washington University, 2150 Pennsylvania Ave NW, Washington, DC 20037, USA
Abstract:

Background Context

Compromise of pedicle screw purchase is a concern in maintaining rigid spinal fixation, especially with osteoporosis. Little consistency exists among various tapping techniques. Pedicle screws are often prepared with taps of a smaller diameter, which can further exacerbate inconsistency.

Purpose

The objective of this study was to determine whether a mismatch between tap thread depth (D) and thread pitch (P) and screw D and P affects fixation when under-tapping in osteoporotic bone.

Study Design

This study is a polyurethane foam block biomechanical analysis.

Materials and Methods

A foam block osteoporotic bone model was used to compare pullout strength of pedicle screws with a 5.3 nominal diameter tap of varying D's and P's. Blocks were sorted into seven groups: (1) probe only; (2) 0.5-mm D, 1.5-mm P tap; (3) 0.5-mm D, 2.0-mm P tap; (4) 0.75-mm D, 2.0-mm P tap; (5) 0.75-mm D, 2.5-mm P tap; (6) 0.75-mm D, 3.0-mm P tap; and (7) 1.0-mm D, 2.5-mm P tap. A pedicle screw, 6.5?mm in diameter and 40?mm in length, was inserted to a depth of 40?mm. Axial pullout testing was performed at a rate of 5?mm/min on 10 blocks from each group.

Results

No significant difference was noted between groups under axial pullout testing. The mode of failure in the probe-only group was block fracture, occurring in 50% of cases. Among the other six groups, only one screw failed because of block fracture. The other 59 failed because of screw pullout.

Conclusions

In an osteoporotic bone model, changing the D or P of the tap has no statistically significant effect on axial pullout. Osteoporotic bone might render tap features marginal. Our findings indicate that changing the characteristics of the tap D and P does not help with pullout strength in an osteoporotic model. The high rate of fracture in the probe-only group might imply the potential benefit of tapping to prevent catastrophic failure of bone.
Keywords:Axial pullout  Biomechanics  Osteoporotic bone  Pedicle screw purchase  Screw pullout strength  Tap design  Thread depth and pitch
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