Summary
Degenerative and reactive structural alterations occurring after experimentally-induced
disc degeneration were evaluated using a porcine model. A cranial perforation was
made through the L4 vertebral endplate into the nucleus pulposus. Three months later,
the lumbar intervertebral disc and adjacent vertebrae were dissected, fixed in formalin
and further processed for histopathological analyses. The results showed that there
were nucleus pulposus fragments, rather than a distinct border between the nucleus
and annulus fibrosus. The central lamellae were distorted and delamination of the
outer anterior layers was observed. Blood vessels emerged from the adjacent tissue,
penetrated the annulus and branched into the residues of the nucleus. Nerve fibres
accompanying the blood vessels could be recognized in the disc within the connective
scar tissue. The epiphyseal cartilage plates in the vertebrae were hypertrophic in
several areas and there was bone formation directed towards the centre of the vertebral
body and the disc. Hypertrophic hyaline cartilage, newly formed bone and scar tissue
filled the injury canal. A slight chronic inflammatory reaction was evident along
vascular buds. The reactive changes dominated over the degenerated features in the
operated disc. Physiological loading enhanced the infiltration of various tissue types
characterizing immature cartilage formation. Prominent neovascularisation of the central
parts of the disc is likely to be of key importance in turning the degenerative features
of the remaining tissue into reactive healthy structures.
Keywords
Disc injury - osteogenesis - chondrogenesis - epiphyseal cartilage - fibrosis