Minimally Invasive Procedures

Percutaneous lumbar discectomy

Treatment of a painful herniated lumbar disc is contemplated only when other measures have failed to relieve the patient’s pain. These measures include, rest, medications, physical therapy, chiropractic care and injectional therapy, wherein pain relieving medications are injected to the site of nerve irritation or compression.

Usually patients present with radicular pain, or nerve pain radiating down the leg. This is usually due to irritation of a nerve by either direct disc compression or inflammation. This is because a segment of disc is “herniated,” meaning migrated from its normal location or swollen beyond its normal location. Occasionally patients may present with back pain due to pain from within a degenerated disc.

Percutaneous lumbar discectomy is a minimally invasive procedure for the treatment of low back pain or lumbar nerve pain due to herniated disk. “Percutaneous” means that the procedure is performed through a tiny skin incision. For a lumbar discectomy, a small cannula, or surgical access tube, is placed halfway between the middle of the back and the flank. This allows the cannula to travel safely through the musculature of the back, through the foramen, a natural opening in the spine, and into the disc. Once at the disc devices are placed through the cannula to remove the diseased disc and decompress the nerves. Occasionally overgrown bone, called osteophytes, caused by arthritis has to be removed through the cannula. The procedure is guided by a scope placed through the cannula and by x-rays. In either case, the surgeon watches the images on a screen while he or she performs surgery.

A true percutaneous lumbar discectomy relies on mechanically decompressing the nerves of the spine. This means that impinging bony overgrowth or disc is physically removed using tiny instruments passed through the cannula. However, energy based ablation may be a complimentary procedure and is often performed after the discectomy. This is called laser thermodiscoplasty and involves placing a laser probe into the disc and using laser energy to liquefy residual degenerated disc and ablate, or burn, the nerves within the disc that can cause pain.

Contrary to traditional back surgery, percutaneous lumbar discectomy usually involves only a small band aid and a single suture to the back. Because the herniated disc is approached in a minimally invasive fashion, important natural structures are not disturbed. Unlike traditional low back surgery, muscle is not dissected or removed from its attachments, there is no removal of uninvolved bone and important stabilizing ligaments of the back are left in place. Patients may, in almost all cases, go home the same day. Postoperative care will consist of rest and physical therapy.

Microscope video

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