J Neurol Surg A Cent Eur Neurosurg 2018; 79(03): 231-238
DOI: 10.1055/s-0037-1615273
Original Article
Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Feasibility of Navigable Percutaneous Disk Decompressor (L'DISQ-C) for Cervical Disk Herniation

Youngki Hong
1   Department of Sports Medicine, Cheongju University, Cheongju, the Republic of Korea
,
Seunghan Yoo
2   Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Korea University Medical Center, Seoul, the Republic of Korea
,
Nack Hwan Kim
2   Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Korea University Medical Center, Seoul, the Republic of Korea
,
Yushin Kim
3   Department of Mechanical Engineering, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Daejeon, the Republic of Korea
,
Sangho Sohn
4   Department of Preventive Medicine, Korea University College of Medicine and School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea (the Republic of)
,
Sung-Young Yoon
5   Plasma Technology Research Center, National Fusion Research Institute, Gunsan, the Republic of Korea
,
Sangheon Lee
2   Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Korea University Medical Center, Seoul, the Republic of Korea
› Author Affiliations
Further Information

Publication History

02 July 2017

23 October 2017

Publication Date:
18 January 2018 (online)

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Abstract

Objective To assess the procedural efficacy and safety of a Navigable Percutaneous Disk Decompressor (L'DISQ-C) for cervical disk herniation.

Methods We performed intradiskal decompression on cervical spine specimens from five human cadavers using the L'DISQ-C under C-arm fluoroscopic guidance. We evaluated our success for positioning the navigable wand tip into the target region and recorded temperature variation at various distances from the wand tip in the cervical nucleus pulposus. The histologic effect of plasma decompression was examined microscopically using harvested tissues adjacent to the procedure site.

Results We successfully navigated the tip of the L'DISQ-C into the target region of the posterior cervical disks on the first insertion attempt in all C3–C4 to C6–C7 disks and in 50% of the C2–C3 and C7–T1 disks. The average temperature elevations within the nucleus pulposus ranged from 4.14 ± 0.08°C to 12.17 ± 0.76°C at various distances from the wand tip with or without saline infusion. A histologic examination showed only minor denaturation at the marginal border of the procedure tract.

Conclusion We effectively navigated the L'DISQ-C wand tip into the posterior target region of six cadaveric cervical disks and performed percutaneous resection of the target disk tissues without significant thermal or structural damage to adjacent tissues.