Study Design: Review of the most recent advances in the development of poro-elastic analytical models that include physiologic parameters used for understanding lumbar disc degeneration due to repetitive loading.
Objectives: To discuss how poro-elastic finite element models that include physiologic parameters such as strain-dependent permeability and porosity and regional variation of poro-elastic material properties of a motion segment can be used to understand the effect of disc degeneration due to cyclic loading on the disc biomechanical properties.
Summary Of Background Data: Mechanical response of the spine to various dynamic loading conditions can be analyzed using in vitro and in vivo studies. Ethical concerns, interpretation of conclusions reached using animal studies, and lack of detailed stress distributions in the disc components are the major disadvantages in using in vivo studies for understanding disc degeneration process. Intraspecimen variability, noninclusion of muscle activity, and difficulty of influx of fluid into the disc during unloading are some of the disadvantages while using in vitro models to understand disc degeneration. The poro-elastic finite element models can provide a method that can circumvent the disadvantages mentioned above and allow a way to understand the relationship between biomechanical performance of the disc due to cyclic loading and disc degeneration.
Methods: Several types of finite element model were developed in understanding relationship between disc degeneration and associated changes in biomechanical properties. Simplest among them include material and geometric nonlinearity of the disc and was used to predict failure in the disc anulus and endplates under static loading conditions. Response of the lumbar disc under creep loading was studied using poro-elastic models. These models were further refined by including swelling pressure and variable permeability due to change in porosity under load to understand time-dependent deformation of a lumbar disc in a multiple creep compression expansion loading. Regional variation of strain dependent permeability and osmotic pressure was included to further refine the poro-elastic finite element model. This refined model was used to study the effect of disc degeneration on biomechanical properties when cyclic loading was applied to the lumbar disc.
Results: The refined model that included regional variation of strain-dependent permeability and osmotic pressure was validated by comparing diurnal change in total stature measured in vivo. The study showed that disc height loss was larger after considerable number of cyclic loadings both in normal and degenerated discs. Cyclic loading also showed that Grade I discs were much more flexible than Grade IV discs. The disc stiffness also decreased as the load cycle increased.
Conclusions: A number of different approaches have been used to address the issue of disc degeneration. Poro-elastic finite element model including strain-dependent permeability and osmotic pressure is the most popular analytical tool currently available that can be used to understand how cyclic loading affects the biomechanical characteristics of a degenerated lumbar disc. However, it is important to note that a complete understanding of the behavior of the intervertebral disc will ultimately be arrived using a combination of analytical models, such as the models presented here, in addition to in vitro and in vivo experimental methods.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.brs.0000146471.59052.e6 | DOI Listing |
J Orthop Translat
January 2025
Department of Spine Surgery, Tianjin Hospital, Tianjin University, Tianjin, China.
Unlabelled: Intervertebral disc degeneration is the leading cause of low back pain, imposing significant burdens on patients, societies, and economies. Advancements in regenerative medicine have spotlighted extracellular vesicles as promising nanoparticles for intervertebral disc degeneration treatment. Extracellular vesicles retain the potential of cell therapy and serve as carriers to deliver their cargo to target cells, thereby regulating cell activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur Spine J
January 2025
Department of Orthopedics, the Seventh Affiliated Hospital, Sun Yat-sen University, Shenzhen, 518000, Guangdong, China.
Objectives: Sleep disorders are considered a risk factor for aging and skeletal degeneration, but their impact on intervertebral disc degeneration (IDD) remains unclear. The aim of this study was to assess associations between sleep characteristics and IDD, and to identify potential causal relationships.
Methods: Exposure factors included six unhealthy sleep characteristics: insomnia, short sleep duration (< 7 h), long sleep duration (≥ 9 h), evening chronotype, daytime sleepiness, and snoring.
Zhonghua Yi Xue Za Zhi
February 2025
Department of Orthopedics, the First Hospital of Huaian City, Nanjing Medical University, Huaian 223300, China.
To investigate the effects of long non-coding RNA KLHL7-AS1 (LncRNA KLHL7-AS1) on the proliferation and apoptosis of nucleus pulposus cells under oxidative stress and its mechanisms. Human nucleus pulposus cells (HUM-iCell-s012) were divided into 4 groups, and unoxidized nucleus pulposus cells were transfected with an empty pcDNA vector (pcDNA-control) to serve as the blank control group. Based on previous studies on oxidative stress-induced nucleus pulposus cell senescence and preliminary experiments, oxidative stress was induced by treating nucleus pulposus cells with 400 μmol/L HO.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cell Physiol
January 2025
Department of Spine, Wangjing Hospital of China Academy of Chinese Medical Sciences, Beijing, China.
In this study, we explored the impact of different biomechanical loadings on lumbar spine motion segments, particularly concerning intervertebral disc degeneration (IVDD). We aimed to uncover the cellular milieu and mechanisms driving ossification in the nucleus pulposus (NP) during IVDD, a process whose underlying mechanisms have remained elusive. The study involved the examination of fresh NP tissue from the L3-S1 segment of five individuals, either with IVDD or healthy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur Spine J
January 2025
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Osaka Metropolitan University Graduate School of Medicine, Osaka, Japan.
Purpose: This study aimed to compare the incidence of radiological adjacent segment disease (R-ASD) at L3/4 between patients with L4/5 degenerative spondylolisthesis (DS) who underwent L4/5 posterior lumbar interbody fusion (PLIF) and those who underwent microscopic bilateral decompression via a unilateral approach (MBDU) at L4/5. Our ultimate goal was to distinguish the course of natural lumbar degeneration from fusion-related degeneration while eliminating L4/5 decompression as a confounder.
Methods: Ninety patients with L4/5 DS who underwent L4/5 PLIF (n = 53) or MBDU (n = 37) and were followed for at least 5 years were retrospectively analyzed.
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