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  4. Tethered spinal cord tension assessed via ultrasound elastography in computational and intraoperative human studies
 
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Tethered spinal cord tension assessed via ultrasound elastography in computational and intraoperative human studies

Source
Communications Medicine
Date Issued
2024-12-01
Author(s)
Kerensky, Max J.
Paul, Abhijit
Routkevitch, Denis
Hersh, Andrew M.
Kempski Leadingham, Kelley M.
Davidar, A. Daniel
Judy, Brendan F.
Punnoose, Joshua
Williams, Autumn
Kumar, Avisha
Lehner, Kurt
Smith, Beth
Son, Jennifer K.
Azadi, Javad R.
Shekhar, Himanshu  
Mercado-Shekhar, Karla P.
Thakor, Nitish V.
Theodore, Nicholas
Manbachi, Amir
DOI
10.1038/s43856-023-00430-6
Volume
4
Issue
1
Abstract
Background: Tension in the spinal cord is a trademark of tethered cord syndrome. Unfortunately, existing tests cannot quantify tension across the bulk of the cord, making the diagnostic evaluation of stretch ambiguous. A potential non-destructive metric for spinal cord tension is ultrasound-derived shear wave velocity (SWV). The velocity is sensitive to tissue elasticity and boundary conditions including strain. We use the term Ultrasound Tensography to describe the acoustic evaluation of tension with SWV. Methods: Our solution Tethered cord Assessment with Ultrasound Tensography (TAUT) was utilized in three sub-studies: finite element simulations, a cadaveric benchtop validation, and a neurosurgical case series. The simulation computed SWV for given tensile forces. The cadaveric model with induced tension validated the SWV-tension relationship. Lastly, SWV was measured intraoperatively in patients diagnosed with tethered cords who underwent treatment (spinal column shortening). The surgery alleviates tension by decreasing the vertebral column length. Results: Here we observe a strong linear relationship between tension and squared SWV across the preclinical sub-studies. Higher tension induces faster shear waves in the simulation (R<sup>2</sup> = 0.984) and cadaveric (R<sup>2</sup> = 0.951) models. The SWV decreases in all neurosurgical procedures (p < 0.001). Moreover, TAUT has a c-statistic of 0.962 (0.92-1.00), detecting all tethered cords. Conclusions: This study presents a physical, clinical metric of spinal cord tension. Strong agreement among computational, cadaveric, and clinical studies demonstrates the utility of ultrasound-induced SWV for quantitative intraoperative feedback. This technology is positioned to enhance tethered cord diagnosis, treatment, and postoperative monitoring as it differentiates stretched from healthy cords.
Publication link
https://www.nature.com/articles/s43856-023-00430-6.pdf
URI
https://d8.irins.org/handle/IITG2025/28643
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