Comparative Development of Thoracic Intervertebral Discs and Intra-Articular Ligaments in the Human, Monkey, Mouse, and Cat
- 1 January 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by S. Karger AG in Cells Tissues Organs
- Vol. 122 (4) , 220-228
- https://doi.org/10.1159/000146019
Abstract
Developmental features of thoracic intervertrebral discs and their association in the adult with other vertebral structures were investigated in four species. The human anulus fibrosus, nucleus pulposus, and intra-articular ligaments were compared to those of the fetal rhesus monkey, mouse, and kitten. Photomicrographs of transverse sections of intervertebral discs document the presence of intra-articular ligaments in fetuses of these four species. Both transverse and sagittal sections of kittens were used to identify the intercapital ligament as it differentiated from the dorsal part of the intra-articular ligament. Relatively frequent dorsal herniation of the thoracic nucleus pulposus in humans may be due to the vestigial nature of the human intra-articular ligament. Quadrupeds have well-developed intra-articular ligaments, which explains anatomically the paucity of dorsal protrusions of the nucleus pulposus into the vertebral canal in the thoracic region of the cat and mouse when compared to the human. The intra-articular ligament was closely associated with the developing prenatal mammalian intervertebral disc in the four species studied, and this relationship and its surgical importance are described.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Age Changes in the Annulus Fibrosus of the Non-ruptured Intervertebral Disc of the CatResearch in Veterinary Science, 1965
- Gadow's Arcualia and the Development of Tetrapod VertebraeThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1959
- OBSERVATIONS ON THE PRE-NATAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE INTERVERTEBRAL DISC IN MAN1951
- IV. The development of the vertebral column in mammals, as illustrated by its development inMus musculusPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Containing Papers of a Biological Character, 1930