Temperature Elevation Caused by Bone Cement Polymerization During Vertobroplasty
Orthopaedic Biomechanics Laboratory, Division of Orthopaedic Surgery, Department of Surgery. The University of Maryland
(1999)
H.
Deramond, N.T.
Wright, S.M.
BeKoff
Abstract.
Percutaneous vertebroplasty (PVP), whereby polymethylmethacrylate cement is injected into the vertebral body (VB),
has been used to successfully treat various spinal lesions. The mechanism responsible for the palliative effect of PVP is unknown,
but it may be the result of neural damage caused by heat liberated during polymerization of the polymethylmethacrylate. The purpose
of the current study was to measure in vitro temperature histories at three key locations (anterior cortex, center, spinal canal) in VBs injected
with one of two different bone cements (Simplex P and Ortho-comp) to determine the role temperature plays in PVP. Tweleve VBs (T11-L2)
from three elderly female spines were instrumented with thermocouples and injected with 10 cc of one of the two cements. Temperatures were
measured with the VBs in a bath (37 degrees C) for 15 min after injection. A Student's paired t-test was used to determine differences in
peak temperature and time above 50 degrees C between the two cement groups. Peak temperatures and temperatures above 50 degrees C were significantly
higher and longer, respectively, at the center of VBs injected with Simplex P (61.8 + 12.7 degrees C; 3.6 + 2.1 min) than those injected with
Orthocomp (51.2 + 6.2 degrees C; 1.3 + 1.4 min). There was no significant difference in peak temerature between cements at the spinal canal
location; temperature there did not rise above 41 degrees C. Although thermal damage to intraosseous neural tissue caused by cement
polymerization cannot be ruled out as a potential mechanism for pain relief experienced by patients subsequent to PVP, it seems unlikely based
on the worst-case conditions tested in the current study.