Clinical Trials Directory

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UnknownNCT04784923

Detecting Malposition of Trans-pedicle Screw From AP and LAT Plain Radiographs

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
20 (estimated)
Sponsor
Taipei Medical University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
20 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Our study focuses on reducing the use of CT (Computer Tomography) for pedicle screw instrumentation, replacing CT with X-ray. We are writing a program to measure the position on X-ray seeing whether the position meets that on CT after operation. In the future,our method can be used in fluoroscopy, helping us detecting screw malposition efficiently during the surgeries, and hoping reduce complications.

Detailed description

Most of the spine surgeries are decompression, fusion, with instrumentation.Instrumentation needs screws. Pedicle screws are often used. If the pedicle screws are mal-located, that is breaking the pedicle wall; the consequence may be injury of the spinal cord, or nerve root. Some lucky patients may have no symptom; however, broken pedicle will reduce the fixation strength which may reduce fusion rate. Detecting malposition screws, currently we use CT (computer tomography) method. The surgeon carefully read the CT slice by slice, looking for clues of screws malposition. However, CT is costly both price and radiation dose.We invented a plain radiograph method which has been pilot tested in one patient with good correction rate. The purpose of this study is to solve the following two clinical problems: 1. What are the inter-observer and intra-observer reliabilities of CT method? 2. The radiation dose for CT method is too high. Does our plain radiograph method has the same correction rate? Materials and methods We planned to collect about 100 patients received spinal fusion and instrumentation who has preoperative CT(or MRI) and postoperative plain radiographs and CT. We will firstly verify CT method's reproducibility by interobserver and intra-observer reliability test. With the same databank, we will use our plain radiograph method again, and test if the two methods' results are the same by Chi-square test. Conclusion: We hope our study can reduce some unnecessary CT examination. In the future,our method can be used in fluoroscopy, helping us detecting screw malposition efficiently during the surgeries, and hoping reduce complications.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2021-03-01
Primary completion
2021-07-01
Completion
2021-07-01
First posted
2021-03-05
Last updated
2021-03-05

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04784923. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.