Literature DB >> 9755038

Degeneration affects the anisotropic and nonlinear behaviors of human anulus fibrosus in compression.

J C Iatridis1, L A Setton, R J Foster, B A Rawlins, M Weidenbaum, V C Mow.   

Abstract

Axial and radial specimens of non-degenerate and degenerate human anulus fibrosus (AF) were tested in confined compression to test the hypothesis that degeneration significantly affects the compressive properties of AF. Due to the highly oriented structure of AF, a secondary objective was to investigate anisotropic behaviors of AF in compression. Uniaxial swelling and stress relaxation experiments were performed on site-matched samples of anulus from the anterior outer region of L2-3 intervertebral discs. The experimental stress-relaxation behavior was modeled using the finite deformation biphasic theory and a finite-difference approximation scheme. Significant effects of degeneration but not orientation were detected for the reference stress offset, sigma(offset), and parameters describing the compressive stiffness (i.e. reference aggregate modulus, H(A0), and nonlinear stiffening coefficient, beta). Average values were 0.13+/-0.06 and 0.05+/-0.05 MPa for sigma(offset), 0.56+/-0.21 and 1.10+/-0.53 MPa for H(A0) and 2.13+/-1.48 and 0.44+/-0.61 for beta for all normal and degenerate specimens, respectively. No significant effect of degeneration or orientation were detected for either of the parameters describing the strain-dependent permeability (i.e. reference permeability, k0 and strain-dependent permeability coefficient, M) with average values for all specimens of 0.20+/-0.10 x 10(-15) m4/N-s and 1.18+/-1.30 for k0 and M, respectively. The loss of sigma(offset) was compensated with an elastic stiffening and change in the shape of the equilibrium stress-strain curve with H(A0) for degenerate tissues almost twice that of normal tissues and beta less than one sixth. The increase in reference elastic modulus with degeneration is likely related to an increase in tissue density resulting from the loss of water content. The significant effects of degeneration reported in this study suggested a shift in load carriage from fluid pressurization and swelling pressure to deformation of the solid matrix of the AF. The results also suggest that the highly organized and layered network of the anulus fibrosus, which gives rise to significant anisotropic effects in tension, does not play a major role in contributing to the magnitude of compressive stiffness or the mechanisms of fluid flow of the anulus in the confined compression configuration.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9755038     DOI: 10.1016/s0021-9290(98)00046-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biomech        ISSN: 0021-9290            Impact factor:   2.712


  82 in total

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8.  Elastic, permeability and swelling properties of human intervertebral disc tissues: A benchmark for tissue engineering.

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9.  Effect of intervertebral disc degeneration on mechanical and electric signals at the interface between disc and vertebra.

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Review 10.  Mechanical design criteria for intervertebral disc tissue engineering.

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Journal:  J Biomech       Date:  2010-01-18       Impact factor: 2.712

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