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Assessment of lumbar intervertebral disc glycosaminoglycan content by gadolinium-enhanced MRI before and after 21-days of head-down-tilt bedrest. | LitMetric

Assessment of lumbar intervertebral disc glycosaminoglycan content by gadolinium-enhanced MRI before and after 21-days of head-down-tilt bedrest.

PLoS One

German Aerospace Center (DLR), Institute of Aerospace Medicine, Department Space Physiology, Cologne, Germany; Department of Orthopaedic Trauma, RWTH Aachen University, Aachen, Germany.

Published: July 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • During spaceflight, astronauts experience an increase in intervertebral disc height and report lower back pain, potentially due to the expansion of these discs.
  • A pilot study investigated how simulated bedrest affects the glycosaminoglycan content in lumbar intervertebral discs by analyzing MRI scans before and after a 21-day head-down-tilt immobilization.
  • The results indicated a significant decrease in ΔT1 values after bedrest, suggesting an increase in glycosaminoglycan content, particularly in certain areas of the discs, which contradicts earlier expectations regarding disc behavior during prolonged immobility.

Article Abstract

During spaceflight, it has been shown that intervertebral discs (IVDs) increase in height, causing elongation of the spine up to several centimeters. Astronauts frequently report dull lower back pain that is most likely of discogenic origin and may result from IVD expansion. It is unknown whether disc volume solely increases by water influx, or if the content of glycosaminoglycans also changes in microgravity. Aim of this pilot study was to investigate effects of the spaceflight analog of bedrest on the glycosaminoglycan content of human lumbar IVDs. Five healthy, non-smoking, male human subjects of European descent were immobilized in 6° head-down-tilt bedrest for 21 days. Subjects remained in bed 24 h a day with at least one shoulder on the mattress. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scans were taken according to the delayed gadolinium-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (dGEMRIC) protocol before and after bedrest. The outcome measures were T1 and ΔT1. Scans were performed before and after administration of the contrast agent Gd-DOTA, and differences between T1-values of both scans (ΔT1) were computed. ΔT1 is the longitudinal relaxation time in the tissue and inversely related to the glycosaminoglycan-content. For data analysis, IVDs L1/2 to L4/5 were semi-automatically segmented. Zones were defined and analyzed separately. Results show a highly significant decrease in ΔT1 (p<0.001) after bedrest in all IVDs, and in all areas of the IVDs. The ΔT1-decrease was most prominent in the nucleus pulposus and in L4/5, and was expressed slightly more in the posterior than anterior IVD. Unexpected negative ΔT1-values were found in Pfirrmann-grade 2-discs after bedrest. Significantly lower T1 before contrast agent application was found after bedrest compared to before bedrest. According to the dGEMRIC-literature, the decrease in ΔT1 may be interpreted as an increase in glycosaminoglycans in healthy IVDs during bedrest. This interpretation seems contradictory to previous findings in IVD unloading.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4224407PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0112104PLOS

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