Journal Article
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
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Water content in human intervertebral discs. Part I. Measurement by magnetic resonance imaging.

Spine 1987 November
Tension-relaxation experiments were performed on human disc lamellae specimens. The water content was found to affect the viscoelastic behavior and a master relaxation curve was constructed from the experimental data. The water content of disc phantoms is measured by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques. MRI was used to compare the discs of patients of different ages. The possibility of obtaining cross-sectional water distribution in human intervertebral disc material using MRI techniques and its relation to the disc's mechanical properties was explored, with the goal of constructing a realistic mathematical model of the disc which takes into account the water content of the disc.

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