6533b825fe1ef96bd1283088

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Collagens in the injured porcine intervertebral disc

Heikki VanharantaX. HanV. KovanenT. M. TakalaEeva KääpäSten Holm

subject

Annulus (mycology)030222 orthopedicsPathologymedicine.medical_specialtyGranulation tissueIntervertebral discDegeneration (medical)Anatomy03 medical and health sciencesHydroxyprolinechemistry.chemical_compoundIntervertebral disk0302 clinical medicinemedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryCollagen metabolismmedicineOrthopedics and Sports MedicineNucleus030217 neurology & neurosurgery

description

Spinal pain often is thought to be due to degeneration and mechanical failure of the intervertebral disc. Since the mechanical strength of the tissue depends on collagen fibers, the present study was designed to investigate the reactions in collagen metabolism after an experimentally induced disc injury. Five domestic pigs underwent an incision in the anterior part of the annulus fibrosus of disc L4-L5 through a retroperitoneal approach. The animals were killed 3 months postoperatively, and the injured discs and intact discs (controls) from different animals were removed for chemical analysis. Slices were cut from seven different parts across the disc. The concentration of total collagen (hydroxyproline [Hyp]), the activities of the two key enzymes in collagen biosynthesis (prolyl 4-hydroxylase [PH] and galactosylhydroxylysyl glucosyltransferase [GGT]), and the concentration of mature collagen crosslinks (hydroxypyridinium [HP]) were determined. In all experimental discs, the morphology had changed considerably: the nucleus pulposus was small, fibrous, and yellowish. The annular lamellar structure was partially destroyed and had been replaced by granulation tissue in the region of the injury. Large osteophytes had formed at the ventral edges of the vertebral bodies. In the nucleus pulposus, the Hyp concentration and the activities of PH and GGT were significantly increased, whereas the water content had decreased. The concentration of HP crosslinks was decreased in the anterior annulus fibrosus.

https://doi.org/10.1002/jor.1100120112