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THE EFFECTS OF POSTERIOR FIXATION ON INTERNAL INTERVERTEBRAL DISC MECHANICS

A. G. Edwards, BSc, Student1; D. S. McNally, PhD, Lecturer1; R. C. Mulholland, FRCS, Special Professor in Orthopaedic and Accident Surgery2; and A. E. Goodship, PhD, Professor of Comparitive Biomedical Sciences1

1 Department of Anatomy, University of Bristol, Southwell Street, Bristol BS2 8EJ, UK.
2 Department of Fracture and Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Nottingham, Queen’s Medical Centre, Nottingham NG7 2UH, UK.

Correspondence should be sent to Dr D. S. McNally.

Posterior fixation of intervertebral discs is used to treat, and occasionally diagnose, discogenic pain since it is thought that it will reduce the internal loading of the discs in vitro. We measured the internal loading of ten intervertebral discs using stress profilometry under simulated physiological loads and then after posterior fixation. Partial discectomies were performed to simulate advanced disc degeneration and the sequence repeated.

Posterior fixation had very little effect on the magnitude of the loads acting on the disc and none when disc degeneration was simulated. It did, however, reduce bulging of the anterior annulus under combined bending and compression (p < 0.03). Recent experiments in vivo have shown that discogenic pain is associated with abnormal bulging of the annulus which suggests that the clinical benefit of fixation may be due to this.






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Hip, Knee, Trauma, Upper limb, Foot & Ankle, Paediatrics, Oncology, Spine, Arthroplasty, General