In The Battle To Relieve Neck And Back Aches, Researchers Create Bioengineered Spinal Disc Implants
Main Category: Back PainAlso Included In: Neurology / Neuroscience
Article Date: 02 Aug 2011 - 0:00 PDT
'In The Battle To Relieve Neck And Back Aches, Researchers Create Bioengineered Spinal Disc Implants'
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Every year, millions of people contend with lower back and neck discomfort. With intent to ease their pain, Cornell University engineers in Ithaca and doctors at the Weill Cornell Medical College in New York City have created a biologically based spinal implant that could someday spell relief for these countless sufferers.
Lawrence Bonassar, Ph.D., associate professor of biomedical engineering and mechanical engineering, and Roger Härtl, M.D., associate professor of neurosurgery at Weill Cornell Medical College and chief of spinal surgery at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, have created bioengineered spinal discs that have been successfully implanted and tested in animals.
The other scientists on the paper are Robby Bowles, Cornell Ph.D. '11, and Harry Gebhard, M.D., of Weill Cornell Medical College.
Their research will be published online Aug. 1, 2011 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
"We've engineered discs that have the same structural components and behave just like real discs," says Bonassar. "The hope is that this promising research will lead to engineered discs that we can implant into patients with damaged discs."
Each year, 40 percent to 60 percent of American adults suffer from chronic back or neck pain. For patients diagnosed with severe degenerative disc disease, or herniated discs, neurosurgeons perform surgery called discectomy removing the spinal disc followed by a fusion of the vertebrate bones to stabilize the spine. In spite of the surgery, the patient's back will likely not feel the same as before their injury.
"The surgery prevents pain, but often limits mobility, which may hinder someone who has an active lifestyle or even end the career of a professional athlete," says Härtl, who is also the team neurosurgeon for the New York Giants.
Human discs look something like a tire, with the outer part, called the annulus, made of a stiff material, and the inner circle, the nucleus, made of a gel-like substance that gets pressurized and bears weight.
Bonassar's lab, which focuses on the regeneration and analysis of musculoskeletal tissue, engineered artificial discs out of two polymers collagen, which wraps around the outside, and a hydrogel called alginate in the middle. They seeded the implants with cells that repopulate the structures with new tissue. Remarkably, as opposed to artificial implants today that degrade over time, the scientists are seeing that the implants get better as they mature in the body, due to the growth of the cells.
"Our implants have maintained 70 to 80 percent of initial disc height. In fact, the mechanical properties get better with time," says Bonassar.
The implants would treat a broad category of illness called degenerative disc disease a leading cause of disability worldwide. According to Härtl, an increasing number of patients need treatment or surgery from the degeneration of the intervertebral disc. A surgical procedure approved by the FDA in 2005 involves removing the disc completely and replacing it with an implant made of a combination of metal and plastic, with the aim of mimicking the normal movement of the lumbar and spine.
"Bone or metal or plastic implants are complicated structures which come with a mechanical risk of the structures moving around, or debris from the metal or plastic particles accumulating in the body from wear and tear," says Härtl.
From a biological perspective, the new discs could create a "huge advantage" over traditional implants because of how they integrate and mature with the vertebrae. This major surgery would become less invasive, safer and come with fewer long-term side effects, he says.
Source: Cornell University
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)
I volenteer
posted by Corman Leger on 27 Sep 2011 at 7:25 pmI've read and further researched this new low invasive surgical procedure from multiple reliable sources. I am truely amazed by the results I've seen so far in this reseach project.
I've been in horriffic pain for 7 years and have a low possibility of any good results from currently available surgical procedures. I've suffered through 18 different "therapies" in the hope of relief, only to find none that helped, in fact some that actually added to my pain level.
I am only 46 years old and otherwise in good health. I would gladly volenteer to be one of the first human test patients with this new technique.
I wholehardedly applaud the efforts of all those dedicated professionals that've taken part in developing this new procedure. I can only pray it becomes available to me before it's too late as the damage to my spine in numerous places has now become degenerative.
To all the doctors and all others involved, I thank you and pray for you for everything you're doing to help those like me that suffer 24/7 from spinal disc damage and hope they can ease the suffering of all the millions of us on this world that suffer so badly from spinal disc damage and degeneration. How, when, and where can I sign up? I'll take any risks involved if theres a hope for salvation from this horrible sufferring I endure dailey. I struggle to simply keep my job, home, and especially important, my wife. Please let me know if I can be a ginea pig for the human trials!
Who can do this procedure
posted by Jan on 27 Sep 2011 at 9:13 amThis is a breakthrough. Where can I find doctors who can perform this as I have 4-5 herniated discs going into my spinal cord. Would love the new life again.
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