Abstract

Scoliosis is often associated with syringomyelia (SM). As an important role in SM formation, the influence from abnormal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flow is still unclear to scoliosis. The aim of this experimental work is to explore the connection between CSF flow and scoliosis through imaging and histological analysis on the basis of a kaolin-induced scoliotic rabbit model. For imaging observation, in 40 kaolin-induced rabbits by C7 spinal cord injection, through pre- and postoperative MRI and radiography, CSF flow and scoliosis formation were detected at consecutive phases. According to the final formation of scoliosis until postoperative week 12, the kaolin-induced rabbits were divided into 2 groups. Through comparing the 2 groups, the relationship between the changes of CSF flow velocity and scoliosis formation were reviewed and analyzed. For histological observation, another 20 kaolin-induced rabbits were used for consecutive histological observations of spinal cord at postoperative 3-day, 2-week, 4-week and 6-week. After kaolin-induction, abnormal spinal coronal curve was observed from postoperative week 6 in the 37 survived rabbits. At postoperative week 12, scoliosis formation was detected in 73.0% kaolin-induced rabbits and the mean Cobb angle was 27.4°. From the comparison between scoliotic and non-scoliotic groups, the difference of the velocities of CSF flow was more obviously from postoperative week 4 to 12, especially after week 6. In the scoliotic group, the peak velocity of CSF flow was diseased gradually following scoliosis formation after induction. Moreover, the decrease of the peak velocities of CSF flow from preoperation to postoperative 12 weeks (ΔVmax), including up-flow (ΔVUmax) and down-flow (ΔVDmax), were positively correlated to the final scoliotic Cobb angle (P < 0.01). Through histological observation at different phases, the distinctive pathological changes of the spinal cord included early inflammatory reaction, adhesion and blockage in the subarachnoid space and the central canal, perivascular space enlargement, central canal expansion, which suggested the CSF flow being blocked by multiple ways after kaolin-induction. In conclusion, experimental scoliosis can be successfully induced by intraspinal kaolin injection. In this model, continuous hypodynamic change of CSF flow was correlated to the formation of scoliosis, which could be an important factor of scoliotic pathogenesis being explored furtherly.

Highlights

  • Scoliosis is often associated with syringomyelia (SM) in clinical, which can be found in 25–85% of the patients being diagnosed as SM1

  • Syrinx started to be observed at postoperative week 6, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanning showed syrinx occurrence mainly in the cervical-thoracic segments

  • A series of experimental SM models induced by kaolin injection into spinal cord and subarachnoid space have been reported[22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29]

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Summary

Introduction

Scoliosis is often associated with syringomyelia (SM) in clinical, which can be found in 25–85% of the patients being diagnosed as SM1. The relationship between scoliosis and SM is still obscure, which has been explained as a causal link through the “paraspinal muscle denervation” theory: the pressure from an asymmetrically expanded syrinx may cause the disturbances in innervation of the trunk musculature and causing the imbalance that leads to resultant scoliosis[4,5,6,7] This hypothesis could not explain several clinical phenomena reasonably, such as the inconsistence between the magnitude of scoliosis and the size of syrinx, the direction of curve and the eccentricity of syrinx in the spinal cord, the site of syrinx and the apex of scoliosis, etc.[8,9,10]. Combined with histological observation at several consecutive phases after kaolin-induction, the postoperative extramedullary and intramendullary pathological changes of the spinal cord were observed for understanding how the modeling method to affect the CSF flow

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