Intervertebral Disc Degeneration Reduces Vertebral Motion Responses
Intervertebral Disc Degeneration Reduces Vertebral Motion Responses
Authors
- Christopher J. Colloca, DC
- Tony S. Keller, PhD
- Robert J. Moore, PhD
- Robert Gunzburg, MD, PhD
- Deed E. Harrison, DC
Publication
SPINE 2007; 32(19):E544-50.
Article Link
Intervertebral Disc Degeneration Reduces Vertebral Motion Responses
Abstract
Study Design. A prospective in vivo experimental animal study.
Objective. To determine the effects of disc degeneration and variable pulse duration mechanical excitation on dorsoventral lumbar kinematic responses.
Summary of Background Data. 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.
Methods. 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.
Results. 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 (;19% and ;50%, respectively) in the degenerated disc group compared with control (100- and 200-ms pulse duration protocols, P , 0.01).
Conclusion. Dorsoventral vertebral motions are dependent on mechanical excitation pulse duration and are significantly reduced in animals with degenerated discs.