AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the biomechanical and histopathological differences in paraspinal muscles of adult spinal deformity (ASD) patients, highlighting decreased muscle strength and altered properties.
  • Muscle biopsies from ASD patients revealed abnormal muscle fiber properties and high stiffness, which could significantly increase spinal loading, especially in flexed positions.
  • The findings suggest that the varied muscle characteristics may contribute to functional impairment in ASD, emphasizing the importance of paraspinal muscles in managing the condition.

Article Abstract

Purpose: Decreased spinal extensor muscle strength in adult spinal deformity (ASD) patients is well-known but poorly understood; thus, this study aimed to investigate the biomechanical and histopathological properties of paraspinal muscles from ASD patients and predict the effect of altered biomechanical properties on spine loading.

Methods: 68 muscle biopsies were collected from nine ASD patients at L4-L5 (bilateral multifidus and longissimus sampled). The biopsies were tested for muscle fiber and fiber bundle biomechanical properties and histopathology. The small sample size (due to COVID-19) precluded formal statistical analysis, but the properties were compared to literature data. Changes in spinal loading due to the measured properties were predicted by a lumbar spine musculoskeletal model.

Results: Single fiber passive elastic moduli were similar to literature values, but in contrast, the fiber bundle moduli exhibited a wide range beyond literature values, with 22% of 171 fiber bundles exhibiting very high elastic moduli, up to 20 times greater. Active contractile specific force was consistently less than literature, with notably 24% of samples exhibiting no contractile ability. Histological analysis of 28 biopsies revealed frequent fibro-fatty replacement with a range of muscle fiber abnormalities. Biomechanical modelling predicted that high muscle stiffness could increase the compressive loads in the spine by over 500%, particularly in flexed postures.

Discussion: The histopathological observations suggest diverse mechanisms of potential functional impairment. The large variations observed in muscle biomechanical properties can have a dramatic influence on spinal forces. These early findings highlight the potential key role of the paraspinal muscle in ASD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9288260PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00586-022-07292-xDOI Listing

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