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. 2011 Aug;7(8):e1002112.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002112. Epub 2011 Aug 4.

The effect of sustained compression on oxygen metabolic transport in the intervertebral disc decreases with degenerative changes

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The effect of sustained compression on oxygen metabolic transport in the intervertebral disc decreases with degenerative changes

Andrea Malandrino et al. PLoS Comput Biol. 2011 Aug.

Abstract

Intervertebral disc metabolic transport is essential to the functional spine and provides the cells with the nutrients necessary to tissue maintenance. Disc degenerative changes alter the tissue mechanics, but interactions between mechanical loading and disc transport are still an open issue. A poromechanical finite element model of the human disc was coupled with oxygen and lactate transport models. Deformations and fluid flow were linked to transport predictions by including strain-dependent diffusion and advection. The two solute transport models were also coupled to account for cell metabolism. With this approach, the relevance of metabolic and mechano-transport couplings were assessed in the healthy disc under loading-recovery daily compression. Disc height, cell density and material degenerative changes were parametrically simulated to study their influence on the calculated solute concentrations. The effects of load frequency and amplitude were also studied in the healthy disc by considering short periods of cyclic compression. Results indicate that external loads influence the oxygen and lactate regional distributions within the disc when large volume changes modify diffusion distances and diffusivities, especially when healthy disc properties are simulated. Advection was negligible under both sustained and cyclic compression. Simulating degeneration, mechanical changes inhibited the mechanical effect on transport while disc height, fluid content, nucleus pressure and overall cell density reductions affected significantly transport predictions. For the healthy disc, nutrient concentration patterns depended mostly on the time of sustained compression and recovery. The relevant effect of cell density on the metabolic transport indicates the disturbance of cell number as a possible onset for disc degeneration via alteration of the metabolic balance. Results also suggest that healthy disc properties have a positive effect of loading on metabolic transport. Such relation, relevant to the maintenance of the tissue functional composition, would therefore link disc function with disc nutrition.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1. FE models, boundary conditions and loading modes used in the present study.
(a) Poromechanical FE model for the IVD with all the subtissues modeled and boundary conditions applied for all the simulations; (b) load history for the diurnal cycle simulation; (c) load history for the cyclic frequency and amplitude comparison; (d) FE transport model with the applied boundary conditions. The red dots indicate the node were the results were calculated.
Figure 2
Figure 2. Distributions of the interdependent oxygen and lactate concentrations.
Distributions are computed at the end of the 16-hours creep, with (left) and without (right) poromechanical coupling. With poromechanical coupling (left) both oxygen and lactate transport equations were solved over time taking into account the current deformed geometry.
Figure 3
Figure 3. Effect of strain-dependent diffusivity and diffusion distances on oxygen and lactate.
Comparisons in terms of oxygen and lactate concentration in the AF and NP of the healthy disc model under three cases: no loading, loading with a reduced disc height, and loading with reduced disc height and strain-dependent diffusivity under the diurnal cycle loading mode for two days simulated.
Figure 4
Figure 4. Effect of different couplings on oxygen and lactate.
Comparisons in terms of oxygen and lactate concentration in the AF and NP of the different combinations studied in terms of couplings under the diurnal cycle loading mode for two days simulated.
Figure 5
Figure 5. Results of the sensitivity study.
Oxygen and lactate concentrations in the AF and NP are normalized to the base model.
Figure 6
Figure 6. Effect of healthy and degenerated disc properties.
Oxygen and lactate levels for the IVD mid-height and as a function of the anterior-posterior position for simulated healthy (top) and degenerated (bottom) disc properties.
Figure 7
Figure 7. Comparison with oxygen and lactate measurements from literature.
Oxygen and lactate normalized concentration from published experimental data on human patient with back pain and scoliosis (patient designation duplicated from followed by the level of the IVD where concentrations were measured) compared with the model results from the present study (case with all DDC simulated, “maximum deformation” refers to the end of the second sustained compression period and no deformation to the steady state solution).
Figure 8
Figure 8. Poromechanics-transport coupling scheme.
Sequential coupling scheme between poromechanical FE model and transport FE model (dashed line box). The latter considered both oxygen and lactate FE analysis coupled to account for IVD metabolic reactions.

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