Abstract

An investigation into the relative elastic and non-elastic components of compressive deformity of the cervical spinal cord has been made. Sixteen patients were examined by computed myelography with the neck flexed and extended, and one fresh specimen of a human spinal cord was studied under reversible transverse compression with the specimen in a stretched and shortened state. In conditions of transverse compression cord tissue undergoes an alteration in viscoelastic properties, manifesting itself as reduced expansion of the compressed segment as the cord shortens, which in some cases is independent of whether the agent is seen to actually contact the cord. The presence of degenerative changes in cord substance probably accentuates this alteration in mechanical properties.

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