Affiliation:
1. 1Department of Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation Medicine, Fukui University Faculty of Medical Sciences, Fukui, Japan; and
2. 2Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Makerere University Medical School, Kampala, Republic of Uganda
Abstract
Object
In this paper the authors' goal was to identify histological and immunohistochemical differences between cervical disc herniation and spondylosis.
Methods
A total of 500 cervical intervertebral discs were excised from 364 patients: 198 patients with disc herniation and 166 patients with spondylosis. We examined en bloc samples of endplate-ligament-disc complexes. Types of herniation and graded degrees of disc degeneration on MR images were examined histologically and immunohistochemically.
Results
The herniated discs showed granulation tissue, newly developed blood vessels, and massive infiltration of CD68-positive macrophages, which surrounded the herniated tissue mainly in the ruptured outer layer of the anulus fibrosus. The vascular invasion was most significant in uncontained (extruded)-type herniated discs. Chondrocytes positive for matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)–3, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)–α, basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) were abundant in both herniated and spondylotic discs. Free nerve fibers, positive for nerve growth factor (NGF), neurofilament 68, growth-associated protein (GAP)-43, and substance P, were strongly apparent in and around the outer layer of uncontained (extruded)-type herniated discs, with enhanced expression of NGF. The authors observed that herniated discs showed more advanced degeneration in the outer layer of the anulus fibrosus around the granulation tissue than spondylotic discs. On the other hand, spondylotic discs showed more advanced degeneration in the cartilaginous endplate and inner layer of the anulus fibrosus than herniated discs. Spondylotic discs also had thicker bony endplates and expressed TNFα and MMP-3 more diffusely than herniated discs, especially in the inner layer of the anulus fibrosus.
Conclusions
The authors' results indicate that herniated and spondylotic intervertebral discs undergo different degenerative processes. It is likely that TNFα, MMP-3, bFGF, and VEGF expression is upregulated via the herniated mass in the herniated intervertebral discs, but by nutritional impairment in the spondylotic discs. Macrophage accumulation around newly formed blood vessels in the herniated disc tissues seemed to be regulated by MMP-3 and TNFα expression, and both herniated and spondylotic discs exhibited marked neoangiogenesis associated with increased bFGF and VEGF expression. Nerve fibers were associated with NGF overexpression in the outer layer of the anulus fibrosus as well as in endothelial cells of the small blood vessels.
Publisher
Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)
Cited by
108 articles.
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