AI Article Synopsis

  • The intervertebral disc regulates external loads and internal pressure through fluid flow, influencing its hydration and height.
  • Two experiments measured how nondegenerate and degenerate lumbar discs responded to axial load and recovery, revealing that recovery times over 8 hours resulted in minimal changes in disc height.
  • The study utilized a viscoelastic model to explain the responses, finding that recovery is significantly slower than loading and that degeneration notably affects the flow in the disc's nucleus pulposus.

Article Abstract

The intervertebral disc maintains a balance between externally applied loads and internal osmotic pressure. Fluid flow plays a key role in this process, causing fluctuations in disc hydration and height. The objectives of this study were to quantify and model the axial creep and recovery responses of nondegenerate and degenerate human lumbar discs. Two experiments were performed. First, a slow compressive ramp was applied to 2000 N, unloaded to allow recovery for up to 24 h, and re-applied. The linear-region stiffness and disc height were within 5% of the initial condition for recovery times greater than 8 h. In the second experiment, a 1000 N creep load was applied for four hours, unloaded recovery monitored for 24 h, and the creep load repeated. A viscoelastic model comprised of a "fast" and "slow" exponential response was used to describe the creep and recovery, where the fast response is associated with flow in the nucleus pulposus (NP) and endplate, while the slow response is associated with the annulus fibrosus (AF). The study demonstrated that recovery is 3-4X slower than loading. The fast response was correlated with degeneration, suggesting larger changes in the NP with degeneration compared to the AF. However, the fast response comprised only 10%-15% of the total equilibrium displacement, with the AF-dominated slow response comprising 40%-70%. Finally, the physiological loads and deformations and their associated long equilibrium times confirm that diurnal loading does not represent "equilibrium" in the disc, but that over time the disc is in steady-state.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3143379PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmbbm.2011.02.002DOI Listing

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