Intervertebral disc herniation and internal disc disruption are both thought to be primarily mechanically based pathologies. Although several studies have previously disrupted discs in vitro, none have examined the resulting disruptions microscopically. The technique of nuclear pressurization was used to mechanically disrupt ovine lumbar motion segments. A hollow injection screw was inserted longitudinally through the inferior vertebra of each motion segment, so that the injection screw’s tip was located in the centre of the nucleus. Through this screw, a radio-opaque gel was gradually injected into each segment’s nucleus until failure occurred, marked by a large drop in nuclear pressure, or focal change to the disc’s periphery. Following mechanical testing, the internal failure characteristics of each motion segment were assessed using micro-CT and microscopy. During nuclear pressurization, motion segments were held in one of four postures:
0° flexion, 7° flexion, 10° flexion, or 7° flexion plus 2° axial rotation. Group I (0° flexion; n=12): Discs failed at a mean nuclear pressure of 13.2±2.1MPa. In most cases failure occurred in a diffuse manner via sequential circumferential tears within the posterior annulus. Group II (7° flexion; n=17): Discs failed at a mean nuclear pressure of 11.2±2.5MPa. Compared to the Group I discs, 7° flexion led to the creation of radial tears extending through the central posterior disc wall. Two types of radial tear occurred: mid-axial and annular-endplate. Mid-axial radial tears were confined to the annulus. Annular-endplate radial tears incorporated both annular and endplate failure; endplate failure in these tears always occurred adjacent to the mid-annulus at the cartilaginous/vertebral endplate junction. Group III (10° flexion; n=17): Discs failed at a mean nuclear pressure of 9.8±2.6MPa. Compared to the Group II discs, 3° of additional flexion increased the proportion of annular-endplate radial tears. Group IV (7° flexion + 2° axial rotation; n=25): Discs failed at a mean nuclear pressure of 7.9±2.4MPa. Compared to the Group II discs, the addition of 2° axial rotation significantly decreased the nuclear pressure at which discs failed, and reduced the occurrence of mid-axial radial tears. Postures that reduced the disc wall’s ability to withstand high nuclear pressures were associated with an increase in the proportion of disc failures that incorporated tears of the cartilaginous endplates, specifically at the cartilaginous/vertebral endplate junction adjacent to the mid-annulus. The robustness of this junction appears to be intimately linked to the robustness of the disc wall.
The detailed anatomy of interconnectivity of intervertebral disc annular fibre layers remains unclear and a structural survey of interlammellar connectivity is required to understand this anatomy and mechanical behavior. The subsequent failure modes of the annulus under hydrostatic loading require definition to understand genesis of annular tears and disc herniation. Interlamellar Connectivity. We imaged anterior annular sections from ovine lumbar discs. Using differential interference contrast microscopy we were able to reconstruct a three-dimensional image of the interconnecting bridging network between layers. Annular Disruption. The nuclei of ovine lumbar discs were gradually pressurised to failure by injecting a viscous radio-opaque gel via their inferior vertebrae. Investigation of the resulting annular disruption was carried out using micro-computed tomography and DIC microscopy. This allowed analysis of annular failure patterns and herniation, with analysis of the pathway of nuclear movement during prolapse in relation to annular fibre separation within and between fibre layers. Interlamellar Connectivity. A high level of connectivity between apparently disparate bridging elements was revealed. The extended form of the bridging network is that of occasional substantial radial connections spanning many lamellae with a subsidiary fine branching network. The fibrous bridging network is highly integrated with the lamellar architecture via a collagen-based system of interconnectivity. In particular this bridging network appears to have a major role in anchoring leading edges of incomplete annular lamellae. Annular Disruption and Disc Herniation. Gel extrusion from the posterior annulus was the most common mode of disc failure. Unlike other regions of the annular wall, the posterior region was unable to distribute hydrostatic pressures circumferentially. In each extrusion case, severe disruption to the posterior annulus was observed. While intralamellar disruption occurred in the mid annulus, interlamellar disrupt ion occurred in the outer posterior annulus. Radial ruptures between lamellae always propagated in the mid-axial plane. The interlamellar architecture of the annulus is far more complex than has previously been recognised and this paper further defines the microanatomy of the disc wall. The hydrostatic pressure failure mode of the posterior annulus mirrors clinic al sites of annular tear and disc prolapsed in the neutral loading position.