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Biomechanical changes in the lumbar spine following spaceflight and factors associated with postspaceflight disc herniation

Published Web Location

https://www.thespinejournalonline.com/article/S1529-9430(21)00845-7/fulltext
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Abstract

Background context

For chronic low back pain, the causal mechanisms between pathological features from imaging and patient symptoms are unclear. For instance, disc herniations can often be present without symptoms. There remains a need for improved knowledge of the pathophysiological mechanisms that explore spinal tissue damage and clinical manifestations of pain and disability. Spaceflight and astronaut health provides a rare opportunity to study potential low back pain mechanisms longitudinally. Spaceflight disrupts diurnal loading on the spine and several lines of evidence indicate that astronauts are at a heightened risk for low back pain and disc herniation following spaceflight.

Purpose

To examine the relationship between prolonged exposure to microgravity and the elevated incidence of postflight disc herniation, we conducted a longitudinal study to track the spinal health of twelve NASA astronauts before and after approximately 6 months in space. We hypothesize that the incidence of postflight disc herniation and low back complaints associates with spaceflight-included muscle atrophy and pre-existing spinal pathology.

Study design

This is a prospective longitudinal study.

Patient sample

Our sample included a cohort of twelve astronaut crewmembers.

Outcome measures

From 3T MRI, we quantified disc water content (ms), disc degeneration (Pfirrmann grade), vertebral endplate irregularities, facet arthropathy and/ fluid, high intensity zones, disc herniation, multifidus total cross-sectional area (cm2), multifidus lean muscle cross-sectional area (cm2), and muscle quality/composition (%). From quantitative fluoroscopy we quantified, maximum flexion-extension ROM (°), maximum lateral bending ROM (°), and maximum translation (%). Lastly, patient outcomes and clinical notes were used for identifying postflight symptoms associated with disc herniations from 3T MRI.

Methods

Advanced imaging data from 3T MRI were collected at three separate time points in relation to spending six months in space: (1) within a year before launch ("pre-flight"), (2) within a week after return to Earth ("post-flight"), and (3) between 1 and 2 months after return to Earth ("recovery"). Fluoroscopy of segmental kinematics was collected at preflight and postflight timepoints. We assessed the effect of spaceflight and postflight recovery on longitudinal changes in spinal structure and function, as well as differences between crew members who did and did not present a symptomatic disc herniation following spaceflight.

Results

Half of our astronauts (n=6) experienced new symptoms associated with a new or previously asymptomatic lumbar disc protrusion or extrusion following spaceflight. We observed decreased multifidus muscle quality following spaceflight in the lower lumbar spine, with a reduced percentage of lean muscle at L4L5 (-6.2%, p=.009) and L5S1 (-7.0%, p=.006) associated with the incidence of new disc herniation. Additionally, we observed reduced lumbar segment flexion-extension ROM for L2L3 (-17.2%, p=.006) and L3L4 (-20.5%, p=.02) following spaceflight, and furthermore that reduced ROM among the upper three lumbar segments (-24.1%, p=.01) associated with the incidence of disc herniation. Existing endplate pathology was most prevalent in the upper lumbar spine and associated with reduced segmental ROM (-20.5%, p=.02).

Conclusions

In conclusion from a 10-year study investigating the effects of spaceflight on the lumbar spine and risk for disc herniation, we found the incidence of lumbar disc herniation following spaceflight associates with compromised multifidus muscle quality and spinal segment kinematics, as well as pre-existing spinal endplate irregularities. These findings suggest differential effects of spinal stiffness and muscle loss in the upper versus lower lumbar spine regions that may specifically provoke risk for symptomatic disc herniation in the lower lumbar spine following spaceflight. Results from this study provide a unique longitudinal assessment of mechanisms and possible risk factors for developing disc herniations and related low back pain. Furthermore, these findings will help inform physiologic countermeasures to maintain spinal health in astronauts during long-duration missions in space.

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