• Spine J · Mar 2015

    Assessment of stress patterns on a spinal motion segment in healthy versus osteoporotic bony models with or without disc degeneration: a finite element analysis.

    • Alexander Tsouknidas, Stylianos Orestis Sarigiannidis, Kleovoulos Anagnostidis, Nikolaos Michailidis, and Sashin Ahuja.
    • Mechanical Engineering Department, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, 54124 Thessaloniki, Greece. Electronic address: alextso@auth.gr.
    • Spine J. 2015 Mar 2; 15 (3 Suppl): S17-S22.

    Background ContextWith an increasing prevalence of low back pain, physicians strive to optimize the treatment of patients with degenerated motion segments. There exists a consensus in literature that osteoporotic patients exhibit nonphysiologic loading patterns, while degenerated intervertebral discs (IVDs) are also believed to alter spine biomechanics.PurposeTo evaluate alterations occurring in lumbosacral spine biomechanics of an osteoporotic model, with or without IVD degeneration, when compared with a healthy spine segment.Study DesignThe investigation was based on finite element (FE) analysis of a patient-specific lumbosacral spine model.MethodsA biorealistic model of a lumbosacral spine segment is introduced to determine the morbidity of disc degeneration and osteoporosis. The model was verified and validated for the purpose of the study and subjected to a dynamic FE analysis, considering anisotropic bone properties and solid ligamentous tissue.ResultsThe yielded results merit high clinical interest. Osteoporosis resulted in a nonuniform increase of facet joint loading, which was even more pronounced in the scenario simulating a degenerated disc. The results also revealed an enslavement of intradiscal pressure to the disc state (in the degenerated and superior adjacent level).ConclusionsThe investigation presented refined insight into the dynamic biomechanical response of a degenerated spine segment. The increase in the calculated occurring stresses was considered as critical in the motion segment adjacent and superior to the degenerated one. This suggests that prevalent trauma in a motion segment may be a symptomatic condition of a poorly treated formal pathology in the inferior spine level.Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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