Micro-mechanical damages of needle puncture on bovine annulus fibrosus fibrils studies using polarisation-resolved second harmonic generation (P-SHG) microscopy
Wang, J-Y; Mansfield, JC; Brasselet, S; et al.Vergari, C; Meakin, JR; Winlove, CP
Date: 16 March 2021
Article
Journal
Journal of The Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Needle injection has been widely used in spinal therapeutic or diagnostic processes, such as discography. The use of
needles has been suspected in causing mild disc degeneration which can lead to long-term back pain. However, the
localised microscopic damage caused by needles has not been well studied. The local progressive damage ...
Needle injection has been widely used in spinal therapeutic or diagnostic processes, such as discography. The use of
needles has been suspected in causing mild disc degeneration which can lead to long-term back pain. However, the
localised microscopic damage caused by needles has not been well studied. The local progressive damage on a
microscopic level caused by needle punctures on the surface of bovine annulus fibrosus was investigated. Four different
sizes of needle were used for the puncture and twenty-nine bovine intervertebral discs were studied. Polarization-resolved second harmonic generation and fluorescent microscopy were used to study the local microscopic structural
changes in collagen and cell nuclei due to needle damage. Repeated 70 cyclic loadings at ±5% of axial strain were
applied after the needle puncture in order to assess progressive damage caused by the needle. Puncture damage on
annulus fibrosus were observed either collagen fibre bundles being pushed aside, being cut through or combination of
both with part being lift or pushed in. The progressive damage was found less relevant to the needle size and more
progressive damage was only observed using the larger needle. Two distinct populations of collagen, in which one was
relatively more organised than the other population, were observed especially after the puncture from skewed
distribution of polarisation-SHG analysis. Cell shape was found rounder near the puncture site where collagen fibres
were damaged.
Physics and Astronomy
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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