The purpose of this study was to develop the compressive stiffness properties of individual lumbar intervertebral discs when subjected to various dynamic compressive loading rates. A total of 33 axial compression tests were performed on 11 individual human lumbar functional spinal units dissected from 6 fresh frozen human cadavers, 5 male and 1 female. The proximal and distal vertebral bodies were fixed to load cells with a custom aluminum pot, and subjected to a dynamic compressive loading at three different strain rates; 6.8, 13.5, and 72.7 strain/ sec. The results show that the compressive stiffness of lumbar intervertebral discs is dependent on the loading rate. There was no significant correlation (p > 0.05) between FSU compressive stiffness and vertebral level at any of the three loading rates. Therefore, a linear relationship between loading rate and vertebral disc compressive stiffness was developed by curve fitting the stiffness data from the current study along with the stiffness data reported by previous studies.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

compressive stiffness
20
lumbar intervertebral
12
intervertebral discs
12
stiffness properties
8
human lumbar
8
subjected dynamic
8
dynamic compressive
8
compressive loading
8
loading rates
8
loading rate
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!