PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2026

The Biomechanical Properties of Porcine Intervertebral Disc Tissue Treated with Different Fixation Solutions

Chow N, Sinopoli SI, et al.

Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials

Wilfrid Laurier University

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study evaluated how embalming fixation solutions alter the mechanical behavior of porcine annulus fibrosus, providing critical context for biomechanical testing of preserved human cadaveric tissue. Porcine cervical discs were immersed for 14 days in four commonly used fixatives (Surgical Reality Fluid, Ethanol, Saturated Salt Solution, Imperial College London formulation) and compared to unfixed controls. Three mechanical assays were conducted: single-layer intralamellar tension, bilayer circumferential tension, and interlamellar peel tests. Results revealed that fixation significantly altered mechanical response depending on solution composition. Saturated salt solution (containing formaldehyde) caused the greatest reduction in toe region strain (≈60%) and interlamellar adhesion (−59%) compared to controls, while Imperial College London and ethanol solutions preserved tissue behavior closest to native state. The findings provide practical recommendations for selecting fixatives compatible with biomechanical disc testing.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

BioTesterUStretch

Single- and bilayer annulus fibrosus tensile tests were performed using a CellScale BioTester with 2.5 N load cells and five-tine BioRakes (1 mm spacing) to measure intralamellar and interlamellar tensile properties. Samples were preconditioned with three 10% strain cycles and pulled to failure at 1% s⁻¹ to derive Young’s modulus, toe region stress, yield point, and failure stress. Complementary 180° peel tests were conducted using a CellScale UStretch to quantify adhesion stiffness and strength. BioTester and UStretch data demonstrated formaldehyde-rich solutions (Saturated Salt Solution) most strongly disrupted mechanical integrity, while phenol-based formulations maintained native-like stiffness and adhesion profiles.
AUTHORS

Noah Chow, Sabrina I. Sinopoli, Mitchel C. Whittal, Diane E. Gregory.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Biomedical Materials

YEAR

2026

INSTITUTIONS

Wilfrid Laurier University

COUNTRIES

Canada

INSTRUMENT USED

BioTesterUStretch

TESTING METHODS

Peel TestingTensile Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

Intervertebral Disc Biomechanics

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