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Surgical Treatment Options

Surgery

It is important for patients to understand there are no quick fixes for pain. Those who have back or neck pain can become out of shape, gaining weight in areas that affect the neck and spine. A spine doctor and spine therapist may want you to make your back stronger, more flexible and more resistant to future injury. (and more here about surgery but make it quick)

Spine Surgery 

While studies show that more than half of back surgeries are unnecessary, there are times when surgery is the answer.

Deformity Surgery 

A spine curvature that is greater than 40 degrees will usually require surgery in order to correctly align the spine and fuse the vertebrae.

Artificial Disc

Perhaps the most anticipated advance in spine surgery over the past 20 years was the arrival of the artificial disc. 

Stenosis Surgery

Stenosis is a condition that can develop as a person ages, particularly for people over 50. It is characterized by a narrowing of the spinal canal, which places pressure on the spinal cord and nerves, because there is not enough room for them

Spinal Fusion 

A surgeon may use bone from the patient's hip or from a bone bank to stabilize two vertebrae after a discectomy.

Kyphosis Surgery

Kyphoplasty is a type of Vertebral Augmentation for Compression Fractures. 

Artificial Disc - Neck

During a fusion procedure, the damaged disc is typically replaced with bone from a patient’s hip or from a bone bank

Pain Procedures

The spine is composed of many vertebrae stacked on top of each other. Between these bones are discs, which act as shock absorbers. 

Lumbar Fusion

Transforaminal Lumbar Interbody Fusion (TLIF) is typically used to remove a degenerative disc and relieve pressure on nerve roots in the lumbar spine.

Flatback Correction

A healthy spine has a natural spinal curve that requires minimum energy to stand or walk. When the spinal curve has been removed, the result is a condition called “Flatback Syndrome.”

Artificial Disc - Low Back

Each year in the U.S., more than 200,000 spinal fusion surgeries are performed to relieve excruciating pain caused by damaged discs in the low back and neck areas. 

Spinal Tumors

Spinal tumors are serious and can potentially be life threatening. 

Non Surgical Options

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Back Strain

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Physical Therapy

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Alternative Medicine

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Muscle/Ligament Strain

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Home Remedies

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Spinal Injections

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Preventive Options

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Minimally Invasive 

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Traditional “open” spine surgery may require several days in the hospital as it may involve a three-inch long incision, in which muscles and tissues are separated for optimal access to the injury site. The surgery usually results in trauma to surrounding tissues and some blood loss. Because of this the affected tissues and muscles need adequate healing time.

Neuro Spine Institute uses the latest minimally invasive techniques and instrumentation to help patients recover in a shorter period of time and allow for a quicker return home.

Innovative developments in minimally invasive techniques have pioneered better ways for the surgeon to access the spine, moreover making the recovery process more seamless. In minimally invasive spine surgery, a smaller incision is made, sometimes only a half-inch in length. The surgeon inserts special surgical instruments through these tiny incisions to access the damaged disc in the spine.

Entry and repair to the damaged disc or vertebrae is achieved without harming nearby muscles and tissues when using minimally invasive techniques.
Minimally invasive spine surgery requires extensive training and experience to master use of the tools, but there is tremendous benefit for the patient.

About minimally invasive equipment and techniques

All of the surgical equipment used in minimally invasive spine surgery must be able to pass through a keyhole-sized portal. These portals are left in during the entire surgery to allow specially designed surgical tools to move freely into the patient’s spinal column and not to damage the soft tissue from exiting and inserting equipment.

When the portal is removed at the end of the surgery, the surrounding soft tissues slowly fall back into their normal place and only require a small amount of stitches to close the area.

Some surgical procedures of MIS of the thoracic spine may require the anesthesiologist to specifically deflate the lung closest to the operating area and the patient will breathe with the other lung throughout the entire procedure. It is considered a very common practice in order to allow more space for the spine surgeon to operate within the thoracic spine.

Benefits of minimally invasive spine surgery include:

  • Smaller incision and smaller scar

  • Less damage to tissues and muscles

  • Less blood loss

  • Less post-operative pain

  • Less painful recovery

  • Quicker return to activity

MIS - Microdiscectomy

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Mis - ILIF

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Mis - TLIF

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Mis - ALIF

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Mis - XLIF

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Mis - SI FUSION

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