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Sacroiliac Joint Involvement in Activation of the Porcine Spinal and Gluteal Musculature
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1999
Year
Pain MedicinePeripheral NerveSpinal DisorderOrthopaedic SurgeryPorcine SpinalLumbar SpineKinesiologyBiomechanicsOsteoarthritisMultifidus MusclesHealth SciencesSpinal Cord InjuryMusculoskeletal TissuePain ResearchGluteal MusculatureSpinal BiomechanicsPhysiologySpinal FusionElectromyographyPossible Pain GeneratorSacroiliac Joint InvolvementElectrophysiologyCentral Nervous SystemMedicineSacroiliac Joint
In the search for causes of low back pain, the sacroiliac joint has gained renewed interest as a possible pain generator. There is reason to believe that the sacroiliac joint plays a regulatory role involving reflex muscle activation, which controls trunk mobility and stability, as well as locomotion. The aim of this experimental study was to determine whether stimulation of nerves in the sacroiliac joint and joint capsule could elicit contractions in porcine gluteal or lumbar spinal muscles. Via a lateral retroperitoneal approach and using hypodermic needles, bipolar stimulating wire electrodes were inserted into the ventral area of the sacroiliac joint and directly under the surface of the capsular membrane, in 10 adolescent pigs (45 kg). This procedure was performed bilaterally, thus establishing two bilateral stimulation sites in the joints. Six electromyographic electrodes were unilaterally inserted into the following muscles: multifidus, gluteus medius, gluteus maximus, and quadratus lumborum. On stimulation within the ventral area of the joint, predominant responses occurred in both the gluteus maximus and quadratus lumborum muscles. However, when stimulating the capsule, the greatest muscular responses were detected in the multifidus muscles. This study addressed the possible regulatory function of the sacroiliac joint, namely, its involvement in activation of the spinal and gluteal muscles, which help control locomotion and body posture, as well as provide stability on the segmental level in the lumbar spine.