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Published in: Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy 2/2020

01-02-2020 | Original Article

On the importance of the innervation of the human cervical longitudinal ligaments at vertebral level

Authors: Tina Stegmann, Hanno Steinke, Philipp Pieroh, Faramarz Dehghani, Anna Völker, Mathias Jakob Groll, Thomas Wolfskämpf, Michael Werner, Julia Kollan, Andreas Hinz, Mario Leimert

Published in: Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy | Issue 2/2020

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Abstract

Purpose

In our aging society, the prevalence of degenerative spinal diseases rose drastically within the last years. However, up till now, the origin of cervical pain is incompletely understood. While animal and small cadaver studies indicate that a complex system of sensory and nociceptive nerve fibers in the anterior (ALL) and posterior longitudinal ligament (PLL) at the level of the intervertebral disc might be involved, there is a lack of data exploring whether such a network exists and is equally distributed within the cervical vertebrae (VB). We, therefore, aimed to investigate the spatial distribution of the mentioned nerve networks in human tissue.

Methods

We performed macroscopic (Sihler staining, Spalteholz technique, and Plastination) and microscopic (immunohistochemistry for PGP 9.5 and CGRP) studies to characterize spatial differences in sensory and nociceptive innervation patterns. Therefore, 23 human body donors were dissected from level C3–C6.

Results

We could show that there is a focal increase in sensory and nociceptive nerve fibers at the level of C4 and C5 for both ALL and PLL, while we observed less nerve fiber density at the level of C3 and C6. An anatomical vicinity between nerve and vessels was observed.

Conclusion

To our knowledge, these findings for the first time report spatial differences in sensory and nociceptive nerve fibers in the human cervical spine at VB level. The interconnection between nerves and vessels supports the importance of the perivascular plexus. These findings might be of special interest for clinical practice as many patients suffer from pain after cervical spine surgery.
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Metadata
Title
On the importance of the innervation of the human cervical longitudinal ligaments at vertebral level
Authors
Tina Stegmann
Hanno Steinke
Philipp Pieroh
Faramarz Dehghani
Anna Völker
Mathias Jakob Groll
Thomas Wolfskämpf
Michael Werner
Julia Kollan
Andreas Hinz
Mario Leimert
Publication date
01-02-2020
Publisher
Springer Paris
Published in
Surgical and Radiologic Anatomy / Issue 2/2020
Print ISSN: 0930-1038
Electronic ISSN: 1279-8517
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00276-019-02316-6

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