Disc degeneration: current surgical options
Orthopedic surgery
Lumbar Vertebrae
lumbar spine
total disc arthroplasty
Diseases of the musculoskeletal system
Intervertebral Disc Degeneration
Prostheses and Implants
surgery
03 medical and health sciences
Spinal Fusion
Treatment Outcome
0302 clinical medicine
RC925-935
spinal fusion
nucleous replacement
dynamic stabilisation
Humans
interspinous devices
Low Back Pain
Degenerative disc disease
low back pain
RD701-811
Intervertebral Disc Displacement
DOI:
10.22203/ecm.v020a25
Publication Date:
2016-12-02T10:34:40Z
AUTHORS (4)
ABSTRACT
Chronic low back pain attributed to lumbar disc degeneration poses a serious challenge to physicians. Surgery may be indicated in selected cases following failure of appropriate conservative treatment. For decades, the only surgical option has been spinal fusion, but its results have been inconsistent. Some prospective trials show superiority over usual conservative measures while others fail to demonstrate its advantages. In an effort to improve results of fusion and to decrease the incidence of adjacent segment degeneration, total disc replacement techniques have been introduced and studied extensively. Short-term results have shown superiority over some fusion techniques. Mid-term results however tend to show that this approach yields results equivalent to those of spinal fusion. Nucleus replacement has gained some popularity initially, but evidence on its efficacy is scarce. Dynamic stabilisation, a technique involving less rigid implants than in spinal fusion and performed without the need for bone grafting, represents another surgical option. Evidence again is lacking on its superiority over other surgical strategies and conservative measures. Insertion of interspinous devices posteriorly, aiming at redistributing loads and relieving pain, has been used as an adjunct to disc removal surgery for disc herniation. To date however, there is no clear evidence on their efficacy. Minimally invasive intradiscal thermocoagulation techniques have also been tried, but evidence of their effectiveness is questioned. Surgery using novel biological solutions may be the future of discogenic pain treatment. Collaboration between clinicians and basic scientists in this multidisciplinary field will undoubtedly shape the future of treating symptomatic disc degeneration.
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