Preclinical model for lumbar interbody fusion in small ruminants: Rationale and guideline

Review

. 2022 Nov 15;38:167-174.


doi: 10.1016/j.jot.2022.10.006.


eCollection 2023 Jan.

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Review

Anneli Duits et al.


J Orthop Translat.


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Abstract

Lumbar interbody fusion (IF) is a common procedure to obtain fusion of the spine by replacement of the intervertebral disc with a cage. Optimization of spinal cages is ongoing to reduce complications such as a pseudoarthrosis and subsidence of the cage. IF animal models (primate, dog, pig, goat and sheep) remain important to assess implant effectivity. But currently the available literature is dispersed and not IF model specific. Therefore unwanted inconsistencies between studies occur that limit generalizability. Based on our experience, anatomical preparation and literature research, we present a rationale for species selection and a practical guide for the surgical procedure in the goat animal model.


The translational potential of this article:

Rigorous methodologic design is an important means to improve translational value and generalizability of large animal IF efficacy studies. This paper provides a rationale and practical guide for animal selection and surgical decision making that can help reduce unnecessary variation between models and improve methodologic rigor and documentation for future experiments.


Keywords:

Animal; Goats; Lumbosacral region; Models; Sheep; Spinal fusion; Translational research.

Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

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