| Literature DB >> 30416413 |
Thomas P Hedman1, Weng-Pin Chen2, Leou-Chyr Lin3, Hsiu-Jen Lin2, Shih-Youeng Chuang3,4.
Abstract
Exogenous crosslinking has been shown to have potential for treating disc degeneration and back pain due to its ability to increase the strength and toughness of the annulus fibrosus, increase intervertebral joint stability, decrease intradiscal pressure, and increase fluid flow through the disc. Some results imply that crosslink augmentation may also lead to changes in the compressive load sharing properties of the disc. The objective of the present study was to evaluate directional stress distribution changes of the disc following genipin crosslinking treatment. Bovine lumbar motion segments were randomly divided into control and crosslinked groups. Annular strains were determined from simultaneous deformation measurements at various time points during compressive creep testing. Four stress components of the annulus were then calculated according to the previously measured modulus data. Immediately after the application of a 750-N compressive load, mean axial and radial compressive stresses in the crosslinked group were twofold higher than control means. Conversely, mean lamellae-aligned and circumferential tensile stresses of the crosslinked discs were 8- and threefold lower, respectively, compared to control means. After 1-h creep loading, the two compressive mean stresses in both the control and genipin-crosslinked specimens increased approximately threefold from their initial 750-N-loaded values. The two tensile mean stresses in the crosslinked group remained lower than the respective levels of the control means after creep loading. A greater proportion of annular compressive load support under compressive creep loading, with a commensurate decrease in both tensile stresses and strains, was seen in the discs following exogenous crosslink augmentation.Entities:
Keywords: Compressive creep loading; Crosslink augmentation; Intervertebral disc; Load sharing; Stress distribution
Year: 2017 PMID: 30416413 PMCID: PMC6208927 DOI: 10.1007/s40846-016-0207-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Biol Eng ISSN: 1609-0985 Impact factor: 1.553
Fig. 1Test setup. Specimen was loaded using an Instron 8521 system mounted with a non-contact laser measurement system on a platform that rotates around the specimen. The dotted circle near the intervertebral disc represented the track of laser measurement on the circumferential surface of the disc. A 7.5-MHz hand-held sonographic probe was used to collect a simultaneous image of internal deformations
Fig. 2The thickness of annulus fibrosus was measured in sonographic images at different stages of compressive loading. The left border of the image is marked in centimeters
Stress distributions in annulus fibrosus of control and genipin groups under compressive creep loading
| Compressive properties | AC | RC | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Initial | Creep | Creep/initial (%) | Initial | Creep | Creep/initial (%) | |
| Control (MPa) | 0.46 | 1.25 | 272% | 0.03 | 0.09 | 300% |
| Genipin (MPa) | 0.86 | 3.32 | 386% | 0.06 | 0.20 | 333% |
| Genipin/control (%) | 187% | 266% | 200% | 222% | ||
Mean values are given. Stress unit: MPa
AC axial compression, RC radial compression, CT circumferential tension, AT lamellae-aligned tension
Initial stress represents the stress difference generated during the process of ramping from a load of 75 N to 750 N. Creep stress represents the stress generated from the 75-N load to 1 h of creep at 750 N. Tensile stresses were decreased in the genipin-crosslinked discs while compressive stresses were increased