Epidemiology of Modic changes in dogs: Prevalence, possible risk factors, and association with spinal phenotypes

Author:

Beukers Martijn1ORCID,Grinwis Guy C. M.2ORCID,Vernooij Johannes C. M.3ORCID,van der Hoek Lisanne1,Tellegen Anna R.1ORCID,Meij Björn P.1ORCID,Veraa Stefanie1ORCID,Samartzis Dino4ORCID,Tryfonidou Marianna A.1ORCID,Bach Frances C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

2. Department of Biomolecular Health Sciences, Pathology Division, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

3. Department of Population Health Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

4. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Rush Medical College Rush University Medical Center Chicago Illinois USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundChronic low back pain, a leading contributor to disease burden worldwide, is often caused by intervertebral disc (IVD) degeneration. Modic changes (MCs) are MRI signal intensity changes due to lesions in vertebral bone marrow adjacent to degenerated IVDs. Only a few studies described the histopathological changes associated with MC to date. MC type 1 is suggested to be associated with bone marrow infiltration of fibrovascular tissue, type 2 with fatty infiltration, and type 3 with bone sclerosis in humans.MethodsThis study investigated whether the dog can be a valuable animal model to research MCs, by examining the prevalence, imaging, and histological characteristics of lumbar MCs in dogs (340 dogs, 2496 spinal segments).ResultsLogistic regression analysis indicated that the presence of lumbosacral MCs was associated with age and disc herniation (annulus fibrosis protrusion and/or nucleus pulposus extrusion). According to MRI analysis, MCs were mostly detected at the lumbosacral junction in dogs. Most signal intensity changes represented MC type 3, while previous spinal surgery seemed to predispose for the development of MC type 1 and 2. Histological analysis (16 dogs, 39 spinal segments) indicated that IVDs with MCs showed more histopathological abnormalities in the endplate and vertebral bone marrow than IVDs without MCs. Mostly chondroid proliferation in the bone marrow was encountered, while the histologic anomalies described in humans associated with MCs, such as fibrovascular or fatty infiltration, were scarcely detected.ConclusionsDogs spontaneously develop MCs, but may exhibit other pathological processes or more chronic bone marrow pathologies than humans with MCs. Therefore, more research is needed to determine the translatability of the MCs encountered in dog low‐back‐pain patients.

Funder

Dutch Arthritis Society

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

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