A linearly expanding spine cage has a minimized diameter in its unexpanded
state that is equal to the diameter of an insertion groove cut into
adjacent vertebral bodies. The cage conformably engages between the
endplates of adjacent vertebrae to effectively distract the disc space,
widen neuroforamina, stabilize the motion segments and eliminate
pathologic spine motion. Angular deformities can be corrected, and
natural curvatures maintained. The cage enhances spinal arthrodesis by
creating a rigid spine segment. Expanding linearly (vertically, along the
vertical axis of the adjacent spine) rather than uniformly, the cage
height increases and holds the vertebrae with fixation forces greater
than adjacent bone and soft tissue failure forces. Stability is thus
achieved immediately, enabling patient function by eliminating painful
motion. The cage width remains stable, so as to decrease impingement upon
a second cage, or upon soft tissue structures in the immediate vicinity,
including neural or vascular elements.