AI Article Synopsis

  • Movement patterns can influence the load on the lumbar spine, yet specific research on their connection to intervertebral disc pressure (IDP) is limited.
  • A finite element model of a 49-year-old female's lumbar spine was used to analyze the lumbar movements of 127 asymptomatic participants during flexion, focusing on two simulation stages: lumbar pattern exchange (LPE) and vertebral pattern exchange (VPE).
  • Findings indicate that while temporal movement patterns didn't significantly affect peak IDP, certain patterns did influence cumulative IDP, highlighting the potential for modifying lumbar IDP through changes in movement timing, which could help in developing prevention and treatment strategies for lumbar issues.

Article Abstract

Movement patterns may be a factor for manipulating the lumbar load, although little information is yet available in the literature about the relationship between this variable and intervertebral disc pressure (IDP). A finite element model of the lumbar spine (49-year-old asymptomatic female) was used to simulate intervertebral movements (L2-L5) of 127 asymptomatic participants. The data from participants that at least completed a simulation of lumbar vertebral movement during the first 53% of a movement cycle (flexion phase) were used for further analyses. Then, for each vertebral angular motion curve with constant spatial peaks, different temporal patterns were simulated in two stages: (1) in lumbar pattern exchange (LPE), each vertebral angle was simulated by the corresponding vertebrae of other participants data; (2) in vertebral pattern exchange (VPE), vertebral angles were simulated by each other. The k-mean algorithm was used to cluster two groups of variables; peak and cumulative IDP, in both stages of simulations (i.e., LPE and VPE). In the second stage of the simulation (VPE), Kendall's tau was utilized to consider the relationship between different temporal patterns and IDPs for each individual lumbar level. Cluster analyses showed that the temporal movement pattern did not exhibit any effect on the peak IDP while the cumulative IDP changed significantly for some patterns. Earlier involvement in lumbar motion at any level led to higher IDP in the majority of simulations. There is therefore a possibility of manipulating lumbar IDP by changing the temporal pattern with the same ROM, in which optimal distribution of the loads among lumbar levels may be applied as preventive or treatment interventions. Evaluating load benefits, such as load, on biomechanically relevant lumbar levels, dynamically measured by quantitative fluoroscopy, may help inform interventional exercises.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cnm.3866DOI Listing

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