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Patient Info
Surgical Procedures
In the most serious cases, when the pain does not respond to other therapies,
surgery may relieve pain caused by back problems or serious musculoskeletal
injuries. Some surgical procedures may be performed in a doctor’s office under
local anesthesia, while others require hospitalization.
- Lumbar Microdiscectomy (microdecompression): Discectomy
is one of the more common ways to remove pressure on a nerve root from a
bulging disc or bone spur. During the procedure the surgeon takes out a
small piece of the lamina (the arched bony roof of the spinal canal) to
remove the obstruction below.
- Vertebroplasty: Vertebroplasty is a procedure to treat
painful compression fractures of the spine. This procedure involves the
injection of bone cement into the vertebral fracture. Vertebroplasty can
result in a dramatic decrease in pain as well as stabilizing the compression
fracture and allowing a return to normal activities.
- Lumbar & Cervical Radiofrequency Ablation :
Radiofrequency lesioning is a procedure using electrical impulses to
interrupt nerve conduction (including the conduction of pain signals) for 6
to12 months. Using x-ray guidance, a special needle is inserted into nerve
tissue in the affected area. Tissue surrounding the needle tip is heated for
90-120 seconds, resulting in localized destruction of the nerves.
- IDET: IntraDiscal Electrothermal Therapy (IDET) uses
thermal energy to treat pain resulting from a cracked or bulging spinal
disc. A special needle is inserted via a catheter into the disc and heated
to a high temperature for up to 20 minutes. The heat thickens and seals the
disc wall and reduces inner disc bulge and irritation of the spinal nerve.
- Intrathecal Pump Implants (ITP’s) are devices that
deliver pain medicine to the pain receptors in the spinal cord to relieve
chronic pain. This is accomplished by implanting a device under the skin in
the lower abdomen. The device is attached to a catheter that is placed
under x-ray guidance in the intrathecal space of the spinal cord.
- Spinal Cord Stimulator Implants: This implantable
device is used to treat chronic pain through the use of electrical
impulses. This is accomplished by implanting a device under the skin that
delivers low electrical impulses through a wire lead to the source of pain
in the spinal cord. The impulses block the perception of pain to the brain
and the patient instead feels a mild tingling sensation.
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