Abstract
<h2>Abstract</h2><h3>Background context</h3> The athymic rat has been used to study the role of osteoinductive products in spinal fusions. This small animal model has been advocated to minimize potential inflammatory responses to allogeneic or xenogenic proteins. Despite past experience, this model has not yet been well characterized. <h3>Purpose</h3> To further define and validate a posterolateral lumbar fusion model in the athymic rat. <h3>Study design/setting</h3> Comparison of fusions after animal survival surgery. <h3>Patient sample</h3> Forty athymic and 20 normothymic rats. <h3>Outcome measures</h3> Manual palpation, radiography and histology at 3 and 6 weeks. <h3>Methods</h3> Single-level intertransverse fusions were performed at the L4–L5 level of 40 athymic rats. Twenty rats were implanted with autograft (athymic/autograft), and 20 had no graft placed (athymic/no graft). An additional 20 autograft fusions were performed on normothymic rats (normothymic/autograft). Half were sacrificed at 3 weeks; half were sacrificed at 6 weeks. <h3>Results</h3> At 3 weeks, 0% of the athymic/no graft rats fused, 20% of the athymic/autograft rats fused and 20% of the normothymic/autograft rats fused by manual palpation. At 6 weeks, 0% of the athymic/no graft rats fused, 30% of the athymic/autograft rats fused and 40% of the normothymic/autograft rats fused by manual palpation. Radiographs were of limited utility in determining fusion, and histology results were roughly concordant with those of manual palpation. <h3>Conclusions</h3> This work further characterizes the athymic rat posterolateral lumbar fusion model. The absence of a thymus does not appear to affect autograft fusion rates, and no spontaneous fusions were seen when no graft was placed.
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