Influence of two consecutive partial lateral corpectomies on passive motion of the canine lumbar spine
Lisa F. Becker, Robin Heilmann, Stefan Schleifenbaum, Stefan Kohl, Thomas Flegel

TL;DR
This study examines how two consecutive partial lateral corpectomies affect the passive motion of the canine lumbar spine.
Contribution
The study quantifies the incremental destabilizing effect of two consecutive partial lateral corpectomies in canine lumbar spines.
Findings
Each PLC significantly increased passive motion in the sagittal and dorsal planes.
The second PLC did not cause a greater increase in motion than the first.
The destabilizing effect of the second PLC was not greater than the first.
Abstract
To assess the effects of a first and second consecutive partial lateral corpectomy (PLC) on the passive range of motion (ROM) of canine lumbar spinal segments. Controlled, ex vivo biomechanical study. Adult canine cadaveric spines (n = 10). Ten canine lumbar spinal segments were embedded in cast resin and aluminium tubes at their respective ends and attached to a spine testing bench. The ROM was measured under a torque of 2 Nm in three movement directions before and after the first PLC at L2–L3 and the second PLC at L3–L4. In the sagittal plane, mean ROM increased by 2.4° after the first PLC and by an additional 1.1° after the second PLC. In the dorsal plane, mean ROM increased by 2.3° after a first PLC and by an additional 1.5° after a second PLC (p < .05). Differences in mean rotational ROM before and after one or two PLCs were not identified. Each of the two PLCs resulted in a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVeterinary Orthopedics and Neurology · Spine and Intervertebral Disc Pathology · Cervical and Thoracic Myelopathy
