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Mechanical properties of nerve roots and rami radiculares isolated from fresh pig spinal cords.

Norihiro NishidaTsukasa KanchikuJunji OhgiKazuhiko IchiharaXian ChenToshihiko Taguchi
Published in: Neural regeneration research (2016)
No reports have described experiments designed to determine the strength characteristics of spinal nerve roots and rami radiculares for the purpose of explaining the complexity of symptoms of medullary cone lesions and cauda equina syndrome. In this study, to explain the pathogenesis of cauda equina syndrome, monoaxial tensile tests were performed to determine the strength characteristics of spinal nerve roots and rami radiculares, and analysis was conducted to evaluate the stress-strain relationship and strength characteristics. Using the same tensile test device, the nerve root and ramus radiculares isolated from the spinal cords of pigs were subjected to the tensile test and stress relaxation test at load strain rates of 0.1, 1, 10, and 100 s(-1) under identical settings. The tensile strength of the nerve root was not rate dependent, while the ramus radiculares tensile strength tended to decrease as the strain rate increased. These findings provide important insights into cauda equina symptoms, radiculopathy, and clinical symptoms of the medullary cone.
Keyphrases
  • spinal cord
  • peripheral nerve
  • physical activity
  • emergency department
  • depressive symptoms
  • stress induced