4.5 Article

Cervical Disc Deformation During Flexion-Extension in Asymptomatic Controls and Single-Level Arthrodesis Patients

Journal

JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH
Volume 31, Issue 12, Pages 1881-1889

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jor.22437

Keywords

disc degeneration; kinematics; arthrokinematics; cervical spine; disc strain

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH/NIAMS [R03-AR056265]
  2. Cervical Spine Research Society 21st Century Development

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The aim of this study was to characterize cervical disc deformation in asymptomatic subjects and single-level arthrodesis patients during in vivo functional motion. A validated model-based tracking technique determined vertebral motion from biplane radiographs collected during dynamic flexion-extension. Level-dependent differences in disc compression-distraction and shear deformation were identified within the anterior and posterior annulus (PA) and the nucleus of 20 asymptomatic subjects and 15 arthrodesis patients using a mixed-model statistical analysis. In asymptomatic subjects, disc compression and shear deformation per degree of flexion-extension progressively decreased from C23 to C67. The anterior and PA experienced compression-distraction deformation of up to 20%, while the nucleus region was compressed between 0% (C67) and 12% (C23). Peak shear deformation ranged from 16% (at C67) to 33% (at C45). In the C5-C6 arthrodesis group, C45 discs were significantly less compressed than in the control group in all disc regions (all p0.026). In the C6-C7 arthrodesis group, C56 discs were significantly less compressed than the control group in the nucleus (p=0.023) and PA (p=0.014), but not the anterior annulus (AA; p=0.137). These results indicate in vivo disc deformation is level-dependent, and single-level anterior arthrodesis alters the compression-distraction deformation in the disc immediately superior to the arthrodesis. (c) 2013 Orthopaedic Research Society. Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Orthop Res 31:1881-1889, 2013

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