4.5 Article

Changes in intervertebral disc morphology persist 5 mo after 21-day bed rest

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 111, Issue 5, Pages 1304-1314

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00695.2011

Keywords

magnetic resonance imaging; microgravity; spaceflight; low back pain; atrophy

Funding

  1. ESA [21381/08/NL/VJ]
  2. German Aerospace Center (DLR) [50WB0720]
  3. German Research Foundation (DFG) [FE 468/5-1]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Belavy DL, Bansmann PM, Bohme G, Frings-Meuthen P, Heer M, Rittweger J, Zange J, Felsenberg D. Changes in intervertebral disc morphology persist 5 mo after 21-day bed rest. J Appl Physiol 111: 1304-1314, 2011. First published July 28, 2011; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00695.2011.-As part of the nutrition-countermeasures (NUC) study in Cologne, Germany in 2010, seven healthy male subjects underwent 21 days of head-down tilt bed rest and returned 153 days later to undergo a second bout of 21-day bed rest. As part of this model, we aimed to examine the recovery of the lumbar intervertebral discs and muscle cross-sectional area (CSA) after bed rest using magnetic resonance imaging and conduct a pilot study on the effects of bed rest in lumbar muscle activation, as measured by signal intensity changes in T-2-weighted images after a standardized isometric spinal extension loading task. The changes in intervertebral disc volume, anterior and posterior disc height, and intervertebral length seen after bed rest did not return to prebed-rest values 153 days later. While recovery of muscle CSA occurred after bed rest, increases (P <= 0.016) in multifidus, psoas, and quadratus lumborum muscle CSA were seen 153 days after bed rest. A trend was seen for greater activation of the erector spinae and multifidus muscles in the standardized loading task after bed rest. Greater reductions of multifidus and psoas CSA muscle and greater increases in multifidus signal intensity with loading were associated with incidence of low back pain in the first 28 days after bed rest (P <= 0.044). The current study contributes to our understanding of the recovery of the lumbar spine after 21-day bed rest, and the main finding was that a decrease in spinal extensor muscle CSA recovers within 5 mo after bed rest but that changes in the intervertebral discs persist.

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