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Novel 3D printed lattice structure titanium cages evaluated in an ovine model of interbody fusion.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Johnson, JW; Gadomski, B; Labus, K; Stewart, H; Nelson, B; Seim, H; Regan, D; von Stade, D; Kelly, C; Horne, P; Gall, K; Easley, J
Published in: JOR spine
September 2023

The use of intervertebral cages within the interbody fusion setting is ubiquitous. Synthetic cages are predominantly manufactured using materials such as Ti and PEEK. With the advent of additive manufacturing techniques, it is now possible to spatially vary complex 3D geometric features within interbody devices, enabling the devices to match the stiffness of native tissue and better promote bony integration. To date, the impact of surface porosity of additively manufactured Ti interbody cages on fusion outcomes has not been investigated. Thus, the objective of this work was to determine the effect of implant endplate surface and implant body architecture of additive manufactured lattice structure titanium interbody cages on bony fusion.Biomechanical, microcomputed tomography, static and dynamic histomorphometry, and histopathology analyses were performed on twelve functional spine units obtained from six sheep randomly allocated to body lattice or surface lattice groups.Nondestructive kinematic testing, microcomputed tomography analysis, and histomorphometry analyses of the functional spine units revealed positive fusion outcomes in both groups. These data revealed similar results in both groups, with the exception of bone-in-contact analysis, which revealed significantly improved bone-in-contact values in the body lattice group compared to the surface lattice group.Both additively manufactured porous titanium cage designs resulted in increased fusion outcomes as compared to PEEK interbody cage designs as illustrated by the nondestructive kinematic motion testing, static and dynamic histomorphometry, microcomputed tomography, and histopathology analyses. While both cages provided for similar functional outcomes, these data suggest boney contact with an interbody cage may be impacted by the nature of implant porosity adjacent to the vertebral endplates.

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Published In

JOR spine

DOI

EISSN

2572-1143

ISSN

2572-1143

Publication Date

September 2023

Volume

6

Issue

3

Start / End Page

e1268
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Johnson, J. W., Gadomski, B., Labus, K., Stewart, H., Nelson, B., Seim, H., … Easley, J. (2023). Novel 3D printed lattice structure titanium cages evaluated in an ovine model of interbody fusion. JOR Spine, 6(3), e1268. https://doi.org/10.1002/jsp2.1268
Johnson, James W., Ben Gadomski, Kevin Labus, Holly Stewart, Brad Nelson, Howie Seim, Dan Regan, et al. “Novel 3D printed lattice structure titanium cages evaluated in an ovine model of interbody fusion.JOR Spine 6, no. 3 (September 2023): e1268. https://doi.org/10.1002/jsp2.1268.
Johnson JW, Gadomski B, Labus K, Stewart H, Nelson B, Seim H, et al. Novel 3D printed lattice structure titanium cages evaluated in an ovine model of interbody fusion. JOR spine. 2023 Sep;6(3):e1268.
Johnson, James W., et al. “Novel 3D printed lattice structure titanium cages evaluated in an ovine model of interbody fusion.JOR Spine, vol. 6, no. 3, Sept. 2023, p. e1268. Epmc, doi:10.1002/jsp2.1268.
Johnson JW, Gadomski B, Labus K, Stewart H, Nelson B, Seim H, Regan D, von Stade D, Kelly C, Horne P, Gall K, Easley J. Novel 3D printed lattice structure titanium cages evaluated in an ovine model of interbody fusion. JOR spine. 2023 Sep;6(3):e1268.

Published In

JOR spine

DOI

EISSN

2572-1143

ISSN

2572-1143

Publication Date

September 2023

Volume

6

Issue

3

Start / End Page

e1268