Study design: A biomechanical study of the compressive creep behavior of the porcine intervertebral disc before and after frozen storage.
Objective: To determine whether frozen storage alters the creep response, hydration, and nuclear swelling pressure of the intact intervertebral disc.
Summary of background data: The mechanical response of the disc is dominated by swelling and fluid flow, whose effects are time-dependent. Because fluid content, which may change during storage, plays a significant role in the disc's time-dependent behavior, changes in mechanical response due to freezing may have been missed in previous studies that focused on time-independent behavior only.
Methods: Porcine intervertebral discs were tested in repeated cycles of compressive creep either immediately postmortem or after 3 weeks of frozen storage. Swelling pressure and nuclear hydration were also measured in fresh and frozen discs. A fluid transport model was used to analyze the creep data.
Results: The creep behavior of the intact porcine intervertebral disc is dramatically affected by frozen storage. The apparent permeability of the frozen discs was 82% higher than that of the fresh discs, and the swelling pressure of frozen discs was 25% lower in frozen discs (P < 0.01). The behavior of fresh and frozen discs became more dissimilar with repeated cycles of creep.
Conclusions: In vitro tests of frozen porcine intervertebral discs do not represent fresh behavior. Frozen storage appears to permanently alter disc behavior. The precise nature of any freezing-induced damage, and whether frozen storage similarly affects human discs, remains to be seen.