| Literature DB >> 26430588 |
Christian Balkovec1, Michael A Adams2, Patricia Dolan2, Stuart M McGill1.
Abstract
Study Design Biomechanical study on cadaveric spines. Objective Spinal bending causes the annulus to pull vertically (axially) on the end plate, but failure mechanisms in response to this type of loading are poorly understood. Therefore, the objective of this study was to identify the weak point of the intervertebral disk in tension. Methods Cadaveric motion segments (aged 79 to 88 years) were dissected to create midsagittal blocks of tissue, with ∼10 mm of bone superior and inferior to the disk. From these blocks, 14 bone-disk-bone slices (average 4.8 mm thick) were cut in the frontal plane. Each slice was gripped by its bony ends and stretched to failure at 1 mm/s. Mode of failure was recorded using a digital camera. Results Of the 14 slices, 10 failed by the hyaline cartilage being peeled off the subchondral bone, with the failure starting opposite the lateral annulus and proceeding medially. Two slices failed by rupturing of the trabecular bone, and a further two failed in the annulus. Conclusions The hyaline cartilage-bone junction is the disk's weak link in tension. These findings provide a plausible mechanism for the appearance of bone and cartilage fragments in herniated material. Stripping cartilage from the bony end plate would result in the herniated mass containing relatively stiff cartilage that does not easily resorb.Entities:
Keywords: end plate; herniation; hyaline cartilage; intervertebral disk; subchondral bone; tension
Year: 2015 PMID: 26430588 PMCID: PMC4577330 DOI: 10.1055/s-0035-1546956
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Spine J ISSN: 2192-5682
Fig. 1Outline of method for specimen preparation. (A) Transverse view of the intervertebral disk (anterior on top) with dotted lines indicating the locations of cuts. First, two parasagittal cuts were made, followed by a series of frontal plane cuts to obtain slices for testing. (B) Specimens consisted of two regions of vertebral bone, with annulus in between. Sandpaper was fixed using cyanoacrylate adhesive to the ends of each specimen to prevent slipping while in the clamps of the materials testing machine.
Summary of specimen details
| Spine (gender, age) | Number of slices ( | Segmental level ( | Tensile strength (kPa) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anterior ( | Posterior ( | |||
| Male, 81 | 8 | T6–T7 (3) | 1,060–2,750 (2) | 146 (1) |
| T8–T9 (3) | 438–1,840 (3) | |||
| T10–T11 (2) | 784 (1) | 858 (1) | ||
| Female, 83 | 2 | T6–T7 | 143 (1) | |
| T8–T9 | 393 (1) | |||
| Male, 88 | 3 | T9–T10 | 583 (1) | |
| T11–T12 | 198–662 (2) | |||
| Female, 79 | 1 | T11–T12 | 1,728 (1) | |
Fig. 2Time-series images (A–E) of a representative specimen stretched to failure. White arrows indicate the direction of pull. Failure initiates at the junction between the hyaline cartilage end plate and bone (black arrow) and spreads horizontally as the cartilage is peeled from bone.
Fig. 3Failure graphs of specimens where sequential slices were obtained. (A) The outer slice (Section 1) from the peripheral annulus required the highest tensile stress to initiate failure, and subsequent slices further in toward the nucleus (middle and inner sections, respectively) required progressively less. (B) Two-slice sample exhibiting the same phenomenon as A. The outer slice (Section 1) failed by rupture of the underlying trabecular bone. (C) In this specimen, Section 1 failed at a modest load (∼1,000 kPa) but continued to resist strongly up to exceptionally high strains, as the cartilage was peeled off the underlying bone.