Lecture 2 Hangman

 
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Where do the first age-related changes occur in an IVD?  Nucleus  
What do ageing IVDs produce less/smaller/a lower concentration of?  Proteyglycans  
What is the most important thing that ageing IVDs lack?  WATER!  
What happens to the ageing IVD that indicates chemical changes?  Brown pigmentation  
T/F Collagen cross links in IVDs are MEANT to be broken.  TRUE, however in an ageing disc the cross-links become less and less reducible (brittle)  
What accelerates the chemical changes in the IVD?  Oxidative stress; i.e. pollution, cigarettes, etc.  
T/F A disc is a vascular structure.  True AND False. The disc becomes avascular after about 25 years.  
How does the IVD recieve nutrition and rid itself of waste?  Imbibition: "Drinking" by disc through movemnet of the spine  
What happenes if calcification occurs at the endplates?  Less water can move in compromising nutrition  
What happens to the annulus as it ages?  It becomes less pronounced and more brittle (collagen increase)  
T/F Disc degeneration comes with age.  FALSE! Degeneration can occur at ANY age  
Name 4 things that happen to an ageing nucleus.  Becomes dry, fibrous, stiff, and volume decreases  
What happends to the ageing annulus of an IVD?  It becomes weaker, anular defects may occur.  
T/F An ageing disc loses some of it's height.  FALSE! Although the annulus takes on a more compressive load, it does NOT lose disc height  
T/F Disc degeneration usually happens after 20 YOA.  TRUE However, disc degeneration can occur at any age.  
T/F Disc degeneation is more common in men and in lower lumbar vertebrae.  TRUE (This suggests a strong MECHANICAL influence)  
During what age period are the most NEW cases of degeneration diagnosis made?  Middle Age  
T/F The gross structural difference between disc ageing and degeneration is that degeneration is most evident in the anulus and endplate.  TRUE  
T/F And MRI is needed to detect reduced disc height and end plate defects.  FALSE An X-ray can show these abnormalities, but an MRI is needed for any other abnormality  
T/F a Circumferential tear is a tear from the inside out.  FALSE This is a tear between bands.  
T/F You should NEVER adjust a patient with disc degeneration.  FALSE! Adjustment can help replenish water so degeneration is not always a contraindication. (Activator is good if nerve compression is a possibility.)  
T/F Inward buckling or the inner anulus, radial bulging of the outer anulus, reduced disc height, and endplate defects are all structural changes that may be associate with disc degeneration.  TRUE  
T/F vertical bulding of endplates into bodies, radial tears, circumferential tears, and prolapse are all possible structure changes in disc degeneration.  TRUE  
T/F Decompression is often a successful treatment for disc degeneration.  FALSE! There is only ONE study in the treatment of disc degeneration with decompression therapy.  
What type of treatment has a good history and is relatively inexpensive to treat disc degeneration?  Flexion/Distraction  
When would fusion be necessary?  As a LAST RESORT when there is nerve root compresion  
Name three types of anular tears.  Concentric clefts, rim lesion, and radial fissure  
T/F If a patient has a radial fissure, they must first have had a rim lesion and concentric cleft.  FALSE! Anular tears are independent of each other  
Describe concentric clefts.  A delamination of the anulus between adjacent lamellae  
Describe a rim lesion.  Circumferential avulasion of periphery.  
What are two things that may be associated with rim lesions?  Sclerosis and osteophytosis of adjacent bone  
T/F Rim lesions usually occur posteriorly.  FALSE! There are 2 times more likely to occur anteriorly and typicall on the antero-lateral margin  
Describe a radial fissure.  A radial disruption of the lamellae sometime resulting in escape of nucleus material (PROLAPSE)  
How can cell and chemical changes in the disc be prevented?  KEEP MOVING!  
Degenerated disc = ???  LOSS OF WATER!  
What are two other structural changes that can take place in a disc?  Degeneration of the z-joints and osteophytes around body margins  
T/F Degeneration of z-joints can inhibit swallowing in cervical injuries.  FALSE! Osteophytes! NOT Z-joints  
What may cause reduced ROM in bending and rotation?  Loss of facet cartilage - as a result of degeneration  
In the Kirkaldy-Willis Degeneration Stages describe the DYSFUNCTION stage.  Abnormal motion, sxs with injury, small degree of joint subluxation  
What is the "medical" definition of a subluxation?  A partially dislocated joint  
In the Kirkaldy-Willis Degeneration Stages, describe the UNSTABLE phase.  INCREASED motion, observable catch/sway/shift, spodylolithesis on motion  
In the Kirkaldy-Willis Degeneration Stages, describe the STABILIZATION stage.  DECREASING pain, stiffness/reduced movement, degenerative scoliosis, loss of disc height, osteophytes, smaller IVFs  
T/F "Prolapse" and "herniation" are interchangealbe terms.  TRUE  
T/F A prolapse usually occurs in the lower lumbar and is at the end-stage of degeneration.  FALSE! Occurs in lumbars, but has NO correlation with other signs of degeneration  
Name three types of prolapse.  Protrusion, Extrusion, and Sequestration  
Describe PROTRUSION.  Anulus bulges, but is NOT ruptured  
Describe EXTRUSION.  Anulus ruptured, but nucleus remains intact  
Describe SEQUESTRATION.  COMPLETE prolapse, nuclear tissue is expelled and no longer attached to nucleus  
Most DCs NEVER adjust herniated discs, but one does... what three things may happen that justify his reasoning to go ahead and adjust?  The pt could get better, have no change, or have to have surgery (which would have had to happen anyway with no treatment)  
T/F NOTHING is completely elastic.  TRUE!!!  
Define ELASTICITY.  Property of a material to return to its original form following the removal of the deforming load  
Define VISCOELASTICITY.  Property of elastisity combined with viscosity  
Define VISCOSITY.  "stickiness" of a substance  
T/F PHYSIOLOGIC loads have a SLOW loading rate while TRAUMATIC loads have a FAST loading rate.  TRUE  
T/F In Virgin's test of Compression and Herniation, compression was proved to herniate discs.  FALSE!!! NO proof!  
T/F Farfan's studies showed that degenerated discs are weaker than healthy discs.  FALSE!!! Degenerated discs are actually STRONGER!  
T/F When Brown, Hanson, and Yorra compressed functional spine units, there was no herniation of the nucleus pulposes (even in degenerated discs) and the vertebral end-plates were fractured.  TRUE  
What is the most common site of herniation?  Posterolateral  
T/F The annulus can be subject to tensile stress in flexion, extension, etc, but the whole disc is seldom under tension even in traction.  TRUE  
According to Brown, Hanson, and Yorra where is the disc the strongest?  Posterior/Anterior  
According to Brown, Hanson, and Yorra, where is the disc found to be weakest?  Nucleus and lateral aspects  
How did Brown, Hanson, and Yorra test for tensile strength?  They sliced the disc into small sections and tested the tensile strength of each individual section  
Galante studied non-axial strength. In what plane did he find the discs to be strongest?  30 degrees to disc plane (3 times stronger than horizontal!!!)  
Define STIFFNESS.  A measure of resistance offered to external loads by a structure as it deforms.  
What is the STIFFNESS COEFFICIENT?  Max. Load Applied/ Displacement Produced  
Where is the greatest STIFFNESS found?  15 degrees to the disc plane  
T/F The disc is more stiff in TENSION than in COMPRESSION.  FALSE!! More stiff in TENSION