Cervical Arthroplasty Adjacent to Fusion, Multiple-Level Cases, and Hybrid Applications

Author(s):  
Paul C. McAfee ◽  
Matthew Scott-Young ◽  
Rudolf Bertagnoli
Neurosurgery ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 201-201
Author(s):  
Luiz H.D.M. Pimenta ◽  
Paul C. McAfee ◽  
Bryan W. Cunningham ◽  
Andy Cappuccino ◽  
Juliano Lhamby ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. E2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mazda K. Turel ◽  
Mena G. Kerolus ◽  
Owoicho Adogwa ◽  
Vincent C. Traynelis

OBJECTIVE The aim of this paper was to comprehensively review each of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)–approved labels of 7 total cervical disc replacements, assess the exact methodology in which the trial was conducted, and provide a broad comparison of these devices to allow each surgeon to determine which disc best suits his or her specific treatment goals based on the specific labels and not the studies published. METHODS The FDA-approved labels for each of the 7 artificial discs were obtained from the official FDA website. These labels were meticulously compared with regard to the statistical analysis performed, the safety and efficacy data, and the randomized controlled trial that each artificial disc was involved in to obtain the FDA approval for the product or device. Both single-level and 2-level approvals were examined, and primary and secondary end points were assessed. RESULTS In the single-level group, 4 of the 7 artificial discs—Prestige LP, Prestige ST, Bryan, and Secure-C—showed superiority in overall success. Prestige ST showed superiority in 3 of 4 outcome measures (neurological success, revision surgery, and overall success), while the other aforementioned discs showed superiority in 2 or fewer measures (Prestige LP, neurological and overall success; Bryan, Neck Disability Index [NDI] and overall success; Secure-C, revision surgery and overall success; Pro-Disc C, revision surgery). The PCM and Mobi-C discs demonstrated noninferiority across all outcome measures. In the 2-level group, Prestige LP and Mobi-C demonstrated superiority in 3 outcome measures (NDI, secondary surgery, and overall success) but not neurological success. CONCLUSIONS This paper provides a comprehensive analysis of 7 currently approved and distributed artificial discs in the United States. It compares specific outcome measures of these devices against those following the standard of care, which is anterior cervical discectomy and fusion. This information will provide surgeons the opportunity to easily answer patients' questions and remain knowledgeable when discussing devices with manufacturers.


2012 ◽  
Vol 512-515 ◽  
pp. 679-685
Author(s):  
Gui Mei Gu

For the incompletion problem of sensors’ collected data in fault diagnosis of the wind power system, this article puts forward a kind of multiple level rules set based on rough set. First, let the sensors’ collected data go through Fourier transform and extract its feature attributes as well as discrete them. Establish the decision table of fault diagnosis according to attribute values. Then set out from the decision table to establish a multiple level set of nodes with diverse reduced levels and deduce the rules of each node, which has a corresponding belief level. When in reasoning and decision-making of the new data using the multiple level rules set, match the information of the new data with the rule of its corresponding node. Finally, achieve the fault diagnosis of wind power generation system by choosing comprehensive evaluation algorithm. The result of the diagnosis example shows the reliability and accuracy of this method in the diagnosis of fault types for wind power generation system.


2008 ◽  
Vol 159 (12) ◽  
pp. 1535-1553 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yeow Wei Choong ◽  
Anne Laurent ◽  
Dominique Laurent

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