A selectively expanding spine cage has a minimized diameter in its
unexpanded state that is smaller that the diameter of the neuroforamen
through which it passes in the distracted spine. The cage conformably
engages between the endplates of the adjacent vertebrae to effectively
distract the anterior disc space, stabilize the motion segments and
eliminate pathologic spine motion. Angular deformities can be corrected,
and natural curvatures restored and maintained. The cage enhances spinal
arthrodesis by creating a rigid spine segment, or if filled with
compressible substances, the cage can be used for motion preservation
between vertebral bodies. Expanding selectively (anteriorly, along the
vertical axis of the spine) rather than uniformly, the cage height
increases and holds the vertebrae with fixation forces greater than
adjacent bone and soft tissue failure forces in natural lordosis.
Stability is thus achieved immediately, enabling patient function by
eliminating painful motion. The cage shape intends to rest proximate to
the anterior column cortices securing the desired spread and fixation,
allowing for bone graft in, around, and through the implant for
arthrodesis whereas for arthroplasty it fixes to endpoints but cushions
the spine naturally.