Intervertebral disc degeneration reduces vertebral motion responses

Date

2007

Authors

Colloca, C.
Keller, T.
Moore, R.
Gunzburg, R.
Harrison, D.

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Spine, 2007; 32(19):E544-E550

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Colloca, Christopher J ; Keller, Tony S ; Moore, Robert J ; Gunzburg, Robert ; Harrison, Deed E

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Abstract

<h4>Study design</h4>A prospective in vivo experimental animal study.<h4>Objective</h4>To determine the effects of disc degeneration and variable pulse duration mechanical excitation on dorsoventral lumbar kinematic responses.<h4>Summary of background data</h4>In vitro and in vivo biomechanical studies have examined spine kinematics during posteroanterior loading mimicking spinal manipulation therapy (SMT), but few (if any) studies have quantified SMT loading-induced spinal motion responses in the degenerated intervertebral disc.<h4>Methods</h4>Fifteen sheep underwent a survival surgical procedure resulting in chronic disc degeneration of the L1-L2 disc. Ten age- and weight-matched animals served as controls. Uniform pulse dorsoventral mechanical forces (80 N) were applied to the L3 spinous processes using 10-, 100-, and 200-ms duration pulses mimicking SMT. L3 displacement and L2-L1 acceleration in the control group were compared with the degenerated disc group.<h4>Results</h4>Dorsoventral displacements increased significantly (fivefold, P < 0.001) with increasing mechanical excitation pulse duration (control and degenerated disc groups). Displacements and L2-L1 acceleration transfer were significantly reduced (approximately 19% and approximately 50%, respectively) in the degenerated disc group compared with control (100- and 200-ms pulse duration protocols, P < 0.01).<h4>Conclusion</h4>Dorsoventral vertebral motions are dependent on mechanical excitation pulse duration and are significantly reduced in animals with degenerated discs.

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Copyright © 2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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