ROBERT MCLAIN, M.D. - NECK AND BACK SURGERY

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1/22/2023

When Back Pain Is Not Benign: Serious Causes of Back and Leg Pain

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Back pain of one type or another affects 9 out of 10 adults at some point in their lives, and at any one time about 30% of the people around you would admitting that they are suffering from low back pain right then.  

It is one of the most common complaints of patients presenting to emergency rooms, doctors offices, and urgent care centers, which means it often gets the kind of attention we give the "common cold".  Because the causes of pain typically relate to minor trauma or benign, age-related degenerative changes, and because 90% of patients will improve with simple supportive care and physical therapy, patients rarely see a specialist - and may not see a doctor - before being sent home with mild medications and advice to follow-up with their regular doc if the pain persists. 
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While the vast majority of back pain episodes do respond to time and a little supportive care, there are some serious, uncommon causes of back pain that physicians can't afford to overlook, yet may not recognize right away. 
Picture of man with back and abdominal pain
​Doctors like the saying "Common things happen commonly" to remind younger Docs to focus on the most likely cause of a patient's problems first.  Serious but uncommon medical disorders account for less than 1% of all causes of back pain seen in a primary care practice, and the time and effort invested in looking for these uncommon disorders is considerable.  So, if a patient's symptoms are typical and their presentation is common, then there is little reason to put the patient through the time and expense of searching for something that's not likely to be there. 
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That doesn't mean we should forget about those more ominous conditions: When the symptoms are unusual, or the story isn't quite ordinary that your doctor may want to look for more serious underlying problems.  When symptoms don't fit the usual pattern for a back strain or disc herniation, or when the symptoms persist too long to be explained by the usual conditions that affect the spine, that when we consider the diagnosis of Atypical Back Pain. 
Picture of older woman with osteoporosis
Patients with Atypical Back Pain warrant a more careful evaluation: a more detailed history and a more extensive physical examination, looking for specific signs and symptoms, may turn up a clue that something more serious is lurking in the background.  And more focused and specific diagnostic studies may look not only at the spine but at the associated systems that can mimic back pain symptoms.  In most cases this careful examination can confidently "rule-out" more ominous underlying disease, and focus attention back on the proper course of rehabilitation and low back care, but in an important few, a serious underlying cause can be identified and treatment started!
 
When do we consider back pain "Atypical"?
The character of pain in patients with a more serious underlying disorder differs from common low back pain . Benign (ordinary) back pain is typically activity related, relieved by rest, and is often precipitated by a recognized injury. Typical, acute back pain begins to subside after four to six weeks.

Pain caused by more serious spinal or physical disorders is atypical in that it:
  • tends to be more persistent,
  • tends to be progressive despite treatment,
  • not well relieved by rest
  • pain may seem more intense at night,
  • persists when trying to rest, and
  • often wakes the patient from sleep.

​Typical muscular strains and sprains may be most tender in a region, often across the lumbosacral junction, but pain that is intense and focal to the thoracic or upper lumbar spine is less typical, and deserves a closer look.  If that pain is associated with belt-like symptoms of rib or flank  pain, or radicular symptoms of pain or weakness in the legs, the need for more careful assessment is clear.
McLain drawing Tumor in the thoracic spine puts direct pressure on the spinal cord
Tumor in the thoracic spine puts direct pressure on the spinal cord, causing weakness and loss of sensation in the legs.
​If you have atypical pain, what will your doctor be looking out for?
 
Cancer in the Spine 
Unremitting pain often raises fears – in the patient and in the care-giver – that “something bad” is going on, and cancer is the bad thing that most people fear.  Since back pain is the presenting symptom in 90% of patients with a spinal tumor, cancer is one of the first things we look for in any case of persistent, unremitting back pain.
​​
Tumor from a renal cell (kidney) cancer
Tumor from a renal cell (kidney) cancer metastsized to the lumbar spine
​The concern is legitimate: Almost every kind of cancer can be found in the spinal column at one time or another.  It is the most common site of bony metastases in the body, and it contains or is adjacent to just about every type of cell that can become a neoplasm.  Tumor cells often find the highly vascular marrow of the vertebral body an easy place to grow and expand. 

​As that happens, the surrounding bone may be distorted or expanded, or it may fracture.  A growing mass of tumor tissue in the spinal canal can cause symptoms of weakness or nerve related pain by directly compressing the spinal cord or the nerve roots that serve the muscles of the body. 
McLain drawing Tumor from the vertebral body invades the spinal canal, compressing the spinal cord.
Tumor from the vertebral body invades the spinal canal, compressing the spinal cord and nerve roots.
If direct destruction of the involved bone results in weakened vertebrae, a pathological fracture may be the first sign that a tumor is present.

History: Signs and symptoms of systemic cancer including fatigue, weight loss, abnormal bleeding, abdominal swelling, subcutaneous masses, or swollen lymph nodes. (AmCancerSoc).  Symptoms typical of common types of cancer, such breast, lung, colorectal, kidney, or thyroid cancers, such as a palpable, mass, coughing and particularly coughing up blood, blood in the stool or urine, change in bowel habits, or unexplained weight loss should prompt a visit to your primary care doctor in and of themselves. and will guide a specific diagnostic approach when it comes to the back pain.
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There are risk factors that also raise our suspicions: Age greater than 50 years, previous history of cancer, duration of pain greater than 6-8 weeks, failure to improve with conservative therapy, and abnormal routine lab values including an elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), or finding of anemia.  If this history is concerning for the possibility of a cancer in the spinal column, the next step will be to obtain an x-ray of the symptomatic level, but also an MRI of the region (cervical, thoracic, or lumbosacral) involved.  Depending on what that shows, a more specific work-up will proceed, and allow us to plan for treatment and tumor removal.
Picture of surgical plan for removing an tumor in the spinal lamina
Surgical plan for removing an tumor in the spinal lamina
Physical Examination: Carcinomas of the lungs, breasts, prostate, kidneys, colon and thyroid, along with multiple myeloma, account for 88% of all spinal tumors that we see for treatment. A careful examination of these organs and systems is carried out whenever we find a lesion in the spine that is suspected to be cancerous.  We examine the spine to identify sites of focal pain, and elicit signs of spinal cord compression.
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Diagnostic Studies: When cancer is suspected, our initial workup will include chest x-rays, mammography, and an abdominal CT to identify the underlying primary malignancy, if one exists.  Imaging of the spine itself will included the x-rays and MRI, but other studies may look for signs of metastatic disease in other bones.
CT image and surgical plan for tumor resection in a large lumbar tumor
CT image and surgical plan for tumor resection in a large lumbar tumor
Basic laboratory studies may reveal anemia, hypercalcemia, and elevated levels of alkaline phosphatase. Serum and urine protein electrophoresis (SPEP and UPEP) are specific for bone marrow tumors called multiple myeloma or plasmacytoma. Urinalysis may reveal hematuria, suggestive of renal cell carcinoma.

Imaging: Spinal tumors are poorly visualized on plain x-rays until the bony destruction is advanced.  MRI can screen the whole spine, identifying lesions in patients with both normal x-rays and bone scans, and is the study of choice to rule-out spinal a cancerous spinal lesion (neoplasia).  Special imaging studies can also localize a lesion so that modern, image guided systems can allow accurate biopsy or minimally invasive removal. 
Images used for computer assisted removal of a spinal tumor
Imaging system used for computer guided removal of a benign spinal tumor in a professional athlete.
If all of these studies return normal after having found a lesion of the vertebral body or surrounding soft tissues, then a needle biopsy is generally the next step in confirming the diagnosis, or to confirm that there is no cancer and that the back pain can be cared for in a more typical and less anxiety-causing way!

Infection 
Spinal infections can come on suddenly (acute) or become apparent over the course of months (chronic). 
X-ray of spinal destruction by infection by tuberculosis
Patient with more than a year of progressive back pain due to tuberculosis.
​Acute infections are most often the result of a bacterial infection, while chronic infections may result from less aggressive bacteria, from rare fungal infections, or from tuberculous (granulomatous) disease.

Vertebral osteomyelitis (infection of the bone) represents about 5% of all cases of osteomyelitis and is an uncommon cause of back pain. Half of patients affected are more than 50 years old and two thirds are men. The most frequent source of bacterial infections come from an underlying urinary tract infection, but any source of infection (dental abscess, infected wound, pneumonia) can spread to the spine.  Immuno-compromised and diabetic patients are at particular risk.

History: Patients with a spinal infection usually present with intense focal back pain, worsened by weight-bearing and activity. Patients often complain of exquisite pain relieved only when laying down.  Sixty percent of patients have some sense of nerve irritation or compression (radicular pain), and nearly a third will have some signs of spinal cord compression.  Fever, chills, headache, and systemic illness are present in many but not all patients.  Chronic infections such as tuberculosis are often associated with weight loss and fatigue, episodic fevers, and night sweats.
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Physical Examination:  Pain is usually well localized and reproduced by palpation or percussion over the involved level.  Severe pain may be elicited simply by sitting the patient up, or by changing position.  If the vertebra has collapsed, focal deformity (kyphosis) may be seen. 
MRI of spinal infection with spinal cord compression
​Diagnostic Studies: The erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) is a sensitive test that may be the only abnormal laboratory value found, but it is increased in 92% of patients with a spinal infection.  The C-Reactive Protein test will also be elevated, but almost half of patients with a spinal infection will have a normal white blood count. Remaining labs are typically normal. 

A TB test should be administered, with few exceptions, as many patients are at-risk individually (emigrants from areas where TB is very common, immuno-compromised patients, and patients with known exposure), and others may have no idea they have been exposed to a sick person. (Figure 2).  Blood cultures are drawn in any patient with high fever, chills, or shaking chills (rigors).
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Imaging: The x-ray changes associated with osteomyelitis are usually not apparent for at least 4 - 8 weeks, and they may be subtle even then. An MRI is our most accurate and sensitive test as it will reveal signal changes as soon as tissue become inflamed or start developing a fluid collection. MRI is capable of differentiating degenerative and neoplastic disease from vertebral osteomyelitis.
 
Epidural abscess occurs in 10% of spine infections, yet 50% of patients with an epidural abscess are not diagnosed until MRI imaging is completed.
Drawing of epidural compression due to spinal abscess McLain
Patients with an epidural abscess initially complain of localized back pain, followed by radicular leg or arm pain, then weakness, and finally paralysis.  With contemporary imaging capabilities and lab facilities, infection rarely comes to this point.
 
 
Fractures of the Spine
 
Fractures associated with major trauma - a motor vehicle accident or fall down the stairs - are usually recognized right away, and present little mystery.  Even if the patient's pain doesn't immediately signal the presence of a broken bone, the history of recent trauma will trigger a more careful evaluation and x-ray or CT imaging will identify the problem in time for prompt treatment.
 
Fractures associated with weakened or osteoporotic bone may be much harder to recognize.  These fractures are called pathologic because they occur in weakened bone, and can be a result of osteoporosis, metabolic disorders, malignancy, or infection,.  And they are common!  In years past, one-third of American women over the age of 65 would suffer an osteoporotic vertebral fracture in their lifetime, making these the most commonly encountered fractures in the primary care setting.  And. while fractures in normal bone are almost always associated with some traumatic event, pathologic fractures can occur after a minor slip and fall, a vigorous cough or sneeze, or just by changing position.
X-ray of vertebral compression fracture
​This is less common now that we have better treatment for severe osteoporosis, but it can still happen!
 
History:  In osteoporotic patients the cause of the fracture may be minimal – a sneeze, fall from a chair, slip and fall in the home. Localized spinal pain, age over 65, female gender, European descent , and low body mass index (thin women) are highly associated with osteoporotic compression fractures.  
Picture of patient with osteoporotic spinal fracture
​Patients  receiving corticosteroid therapy for any length of time have an increased risk.  Patients who have been bed- or chair-bound for any length of time will loss bone density quickly and be at increased risk when they start to get up and around again.  Compression fractures are rarely associated with neurological deficits, but once you've had one, you tend to have more, because all of the bones suffer from the same degree of weakness.  

Plain x-rays are not as good as MRI at distinguishing a recent compression fracture from other pathologic fractures caused by infection or malignancy, and your doctor will want to investigate other areas of health if there are any other signs of generalized illness.
 
Physical Exam: Localized pain over the involved vertebra is moderate and increased with motion and weight-bearing. Patient may complain of inability to bend or twist due to pain or muscle spasm.

Diagnostic Studies: Routine labs and thyroid function tests are normally obtained. Specific laboratory studies may be ordered if there is a question of pathological fracture due to myeloma or other cancer.
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 AP and lateral roentgenograms are the initial study of choice as they are easily obtained and compared to determine if the fracture is stable or progressively collapsing. If a fracture is diagnosed or the exam is equivocal then an MRI is appropriate to determine whether the fracture is recent or an old an previously unrecognized one. If the fracture is progressively collapsing, it's important to recognize this early as there are minimally invasive surgical treatments that can stop the collapse and relieve the pain, if the problem is recognized in time.   
 
Intra-Abdominal Diseases that can Cause Back Pain Symptoms
 
There are a variety of disorders of the abdominal organs that can, on rare occasions, produce severe back pain, mimicking lumbar or thoracolumbar spinal disease.  Though quite uncommon, some of these disorders are potentially life-threatening, and in these cases it is important that your doctor hears about symptoms that may seem to you like they wouldn't have anything to do with your spine!
Picture of abdominal aortic aneurysm
​History: Back pain caused by abdominal (visceral) sources is usually not directly triggered by physical activity, but may come on suddenly and severely when at rest or when eating.  The pain may be intense and unremitting, or may come and go, being intensely colicky, or throbbing, in nature. 

Pain that is:
  • associated with eating,
  • associated with the menstrual cycle,
  • colicky or cramping in nature,
  • associated with nausea, constipation or diarrhea
  • reproduced by abdominal pressure or examination,
is unlikely to originate from the spinal tissues and a careful abdominal exam is called for.

​  Any history of previous abdominal surgery, renal stones or gall bladder stones, gastric ulcer, or abdominal aneurysm needs to be reported to your doctor at the time of the initial evaluation.  
Picture of Dr. McLain in surgery
​Physical Examination: Percussion over the costovertebral angle of the back will typically reproduce pain of kidney infection (pyelonephritis) or renal stone. 
Illustration of kidney stones causing back pain
​Rectal examination will identify blood in the stool in cases of stomach ulcer or colorectal disease.  Depending on the cause, the abdomen may be tender and bloated, or silent and rigid.  Deep palpation by the physician may reveal guarding, rebound, or focal tenderness which are signs of an abdominal problem requiring immediate evaluation.  Signs of an "acute abdomen", or palpation of a pulsatile mass in the abdomen should generate an immediate surgical evaluation.  
Picture of a gastric ulcer
​Diagnostic Studies:  In addition to the routine metabolic panel, an abdominal x-ray will reveal evidence of free air, small bowel obstruction, biliary disease, or aortic aneurysm.  Abdominal CT can further elucidate these findings, if indicated.  Lumbar x-rays typically show the outline of the aorta as it passes along the front of the spine, and the presence and severity of an aneurysm can often be estimated from these views before the abdominal studies are ordered.
 
 Abdominal Aneurysm
Thirty percent of patients with an abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) are misdiagnosed on initial presentation. An aortic aneurysm that is expanding (dissecting) can produce intense mid-thoracic or lumbar back pain, and is the most serious of vascular problems that can masquerade as a back problem.  The pain of the aneurysm can be caused by compression of adjacent structures by the aorta, or by dissection of the arterial wall. The pain of aortic dissection is intense and undiminished by narcotics, and the patient appears to be in shock - sweating, apprehensive, pale and incapacitated. 
Picture of patient with severe abdominal pain
A pulsatile abdominal mass can be felt on exam in almost all cases. Lower extremity pulses may be diminished or asymmetrical.  Patients with risk factors for peripheral vascular disease (smoking, HTN, diabetes) and those with a known aneurysm, should be assessed for an aortic dissection anytime they present with atypical back pain.  Once recognized, a dissection aneurysm requires emergency treatment! 
Picture of team racing to the operating room
Intra-abdominal (Visceral) Disorders
Ulcers, especially those involving the posterior stomach wall, may cause thoracolumbar and upper lumbar back pain. A previous history of ulcers is important to know about.

Renal (kidney) pain is usually experienced as colicky pain at the thoracolumbar junction and flank.  Kidney infections (Pyelonephritis), renal artery occlusion, or Kidney stones (nephrolisthiasis) may all cause severe, colicky back pain.  Bladder disorders may cause low back symptoms, usually concurrent with suprapubic discomfort and urinary symptoms of burning and bladder frequency.

Pancreatic disease produces pain in the upper lumbar region, worse when laying down, and often associated with severe generalized illness. A past medical history of pancreatitis, jaundice, or alcoholism, with increased lab values of amylase and lipase, differentiates pancreatic pain from spinal pain.

Pain of pelvic origin caused by ovarian torsion or rupture, ectopic pregnancy, endometriosis, or fibroids, may present as back pain unrelated to changes in body position or movement.  New, acute onset of atypical back pain, should prompt a discussion of possible pregnancy and appropriate testing.
 
Spinal Cord And Cauda Equina Compression
 
Finally, there are situations where the problem is definitely coming from the spine, and the pain is definitely the result of disc disease and nerve compression, but the usual plan for the patient to rest, wait, and recover is absolutely not the right thing to do!


Spinal cord compression occurs when any portion of the spinal canal above the lumbar spine is narrowed or invaded by tumor, disc, infection or bone fragments from a fracture.
Dr. McLain drawing of spinal cord compression by  a herniated disc
Cauda equina compression occurs when severe lumbar nerve compression is caused by a massive disc herniation, or by a more ominous problem such as fracture, tumor, or epidural hematoma or abscess.  
MIR picture of cauda equina compression
The finding of a cord level or cauda equina level neurological deficit should trigger your doctor to start an immediate and aggressive search for the cause.

Patients with cauda equine syndrome typically present with urinary retention (can't pee) while those with spinal cord compression present with incontinence (can't not pee). The classic symptoms of low back pain, bilateral leg pain symptoms, saddle anesthesia, and lower extremity weakness progressing to paralysis, develop over hours or days, and are variably present at the time the patient presents for care. 

Any combination of these symptoms may exist at the time of first evaluation, requiring a high degree of suspicion by the examining physician.  Decreased reflexes (Hypo-reflexia) is typically a sign of cauda equina compression, while spasticity (hyper-reflexia), suggests spinal cord compression, necessitating an evaluation of the cervical and thoracic spine. MRI is the diagnostic study of choice.  Surgical decompression is warranted on an emergent basis if a compressive etiology is identified.
 
Epidural Hematoma:
Rarely, thoracic and low back pain may be caused be an epidural hematoma. The clinical presentation of a hematoma may mimic a disc herniation, and the lesion functions much the way an epidural abscess does - the expanding collection of fluid compresses and eventually compromises the nerves or spinal cord at that level.  This produces back and leg pain symptoms early on, but progresses to weakness and paralysis if untreated.  The hematoma can progress much more rapidly, however, and there are no symptoms of fever or infection to provide a warning.

​Because epidural hematomas most often occur following spine surgery or in patients receiving anticoagulation therapy, your doctor's level of suspicion should be heightened in these patients. Patients with motor deficits (weakness) or urinary retention need emergent surgical decompression of the hematoma.
MRI epidural hematoma
Summary:
 
These uncommon spinal disorders are not likely to play a role in your common back pain problem, and persistence of low back pain or leg pain associated with a recognized disc herniation or spinal disorder does not suggest that there is "something else" going on.  The work-up involved in making a good diagnosis of a known lumbar spine disorder will typically rule out any of these more ominous problems right from the start.

However, if you have pain that doesn't seem typical of a lumbar spinal problem, and which hasn't been fully evaluated by a careful medical work-up, then it may be to your benefit to see a specialist to get a complete assessment and a clean bill of health!
 
The evaluation and identification of even the most dangerous causes of back pain is more a matter of careful medical evaluation – taking a good history and performing a careful exam -  than of specialized spinal knowledge or testing. So, getting a careful exam from your doctor is the right place to start.  After that, it's important to remember that our most fundamental imaging studies for back pain problems - x-ray and MRI - are very good at revealing or ruling out many of these most concerning disorders.  Incorporated into a comprehensive work-up for atypical back pain, our modern imaging and diagnostic laboratory tools can help identify even the most uncommon problems and get us started on the right treatment path without delay.
 
I hope you've found this discussion interesting and informative.  Please share with friends and others who may benefit, comment if you have other questions you'd like to see addressed, and follow me on Facebook for announcements of other blog posts in the future.
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Thanks for reading!

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1/13/2023

Back Pain and Spine Surgery: Things You Should Know about Spinal Fusion

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Patients with spinal problems that result from “wear and tear” of the spine – disc degeneration - present one of three ways.  

Most patients experience back pain as their primary symptom, sometimes severe and disabling, sometimes dull and constant and mostly aggravating.  Less frequently, but still pretty often, patients experience leg pain, a burning or tingling sensation running down the thigh or calf towards the foot, sometimes associated with muscular weakness.  Finally, many patients are unlucky enough to suffer with a combination of both back and leg pain. 
Patient with low back pain

​Which of these pain patterns a patient has determines more about his or her subsequent evaluation, treatment, and prognosis for recovery than does any other aspect of evaluation or care.  So, the first and often most important question your doctor will ask is, “Where does it hurt?”.
Dr. Robert McLain in surgery
​The Causes of Back Pain:
The sensation of pain that any individual experiences is determined by the nature, or cause, of the pain, and the location of the pain generator – the actual structure or tissue that is generating the pain signals.
 
Pain is produced when:
  • normal tissue is fractured, torn, or crushed
  • any tissue with nerve endings is exposed to prolonged or excessive mechanical pressure
  • blood supply is cut off to muscle or nerve
  • a nerve is directly compressed or irritated
  • abnormal or excessive motion stretches or pinches connective tissues
  • nerve endings are exposed to chemicals that irritate and inflame them
 
The kind of back pain that most people experience is the result of several things happening all at once.  Or more likely, a number of things piling up over the years until they all start affecting you all at once!

An underlying level of “wear and tear” may have been building up for years.  The disc may have lost some of its water content, or the facet joints may have become arthritic.  A direct injury to the back could result in a fracture or ligament injury.  On top of these issues, the back muscles have gotten out of shape and flabby, and can no longer do their required job without becoming painful and going into spasm.  And that leads to all of the other muscles of the buttocks, hips, and back to become de-conditioned and easily irritable. 
Drawing of spinal muscles
With all of these things going on, no wonder your back hurts!
 
Now imagine trying to provide one simple treatment that can fix all of those things – and more – at the same time.  This is why back pain care requires a multidisciplinary approach (calling on health care providers with a variety of skills and interests) and lots of patience.
 
Back Pain
Drawing of spinal anatomy and lumbar spine
80 – 90% of all back pain is idiopathic – meaning that we don’t really know what exactly is causing it.  We call it mechanical back pain if it’s made worse by activity or motion, but that doesn’t always get us closer to understanding the source of the pain.  And that’s because there usually isn’t just one source.
 
Back pain that persists long enough to warrant a specific evaluation usually has more than one contributing factor:
 
If the pain came on suddenly, after an acute injury, then it’s likely that there has been an acute injury to the muscles and ligaments of the back.  But there is also an immediate release of inflammatory substances into the tissue that causes swelling and pain. These substances make the local nerve endings more sensitive to minor irritations.  If there is a fracture and bone is disrupted, then a hematoma forms which exerts pressure on the surrounding tissues.
 
If the pain came on insidiously over time, or has become chronic, then degenerative processes have probably affected the intervertebral disc and the facet joints, and may do so at several adjacent levels.  Inflammation plays a role here as well, and back muscle fatigue and spasm are common. 
Drawing of degenerative disc disease in lumbar spine
In either case, conservative therapy is the first line of treatment, and it has a lot to offer.
 
The vast majority of acute injuries will resolve and recover on their own, and physical therapy and pain management can help speed that process.  Except in severe injuries such as major fractures or ligamentous disruptions, surgery for these acute injuries provides no benefit over non-operative care, only serving to increase risk and local tissue trauma.
 
 
Back Pain in Acute Strain or Injury is produced by:
  • Any of the back muscles overlying or near the area of injury or irritation
  • The structures of and around the facet joints
  • The disc and its accompanying ligaments, the anterior and posterior longitudinal ligaments
  • The neural elements within the thecal sac and the sack itself
  • The nerve roots as they leave the thecal sac and exit the spinal canal
  • The bones of the anterior and posterior elements: lamina, processes, pedicles, and the vertebral body
 
Even when acute back pain lingers or progresses, sorting out exactly which tissue is causing the pain, or even which level of the spine is painful, can be very difficult.  There is no test or imaging study that shows "pain", and the physician must be careful not to attribute poorly localized or diffuse symptoms to a single structure just because it looks odd or diseased on radiographs.  That’s because:
 
MRI overestimates back disease: 30% or more of normal, middle aged adults, and 60 – 70% of normal, asymptomatic, older adults (people with no back pain at all) have clearly abnormal MRI studies – with disc degeneration, herniations, facet arthritis, and or stenosis.
 
And when degeneration affects multiple levels of the spine, it’s not only hard to sort out which level is the primary pain generator, it’s probably true that every level is at least a little bit painful, and that all are contributing to pain and poor function.  Operating on multiple levels of the spine can cause more harm than good, so sorting out the primary source of pain is crucial to a successful operation.  In the same sense, if you can’t locate a primary pain generator, or if all of the spinal levels are equally symptomatic, then surgical fusion is not likely to help, and probably shouldn’t be attempted without more information.
 
Although physical therapy can’t reverse the aging process, it can improve function and mobility.  Surgery, on the other hand, adds further trauma to the situation without reliably reducing the symptoms of myofascial (muscle, tendons,  and ligament) back pain.
 
Unless back pain symptoms are well localized, and clearly associated with signs of structural instability, deformity, or disc injury, surgical fusion cannot reliably improve the situation. 
If instability does exist, however, fusion can provide significant improvement.
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Dr. Robert McLain performing spine surgery
Surgical Treatment for Back Pain:
​

There are a number of causes of back pain that can be helped by surgery, but almost none that can be cured outright, or without some form of rehabilitation and conditioning program after surgery. 
 
Fusion, also called arthrodesis, is the cornerstone to surgical treatment of back pain.  A posterolateral lumbar fusion is the key part of the surgical management of many spinal disorders.  This utilitarian surgical procedure has been used to treat thoracolumbar and lumbar instability caused by fractures, disc degeneration, or spondylolisthesis.  It has been used successfully in the treatment of lumbar disc disease and discogenic pain.  Additionally, posterolateral arthrodesis may be used to reconstruct the spine when more destructive processes, such as tumors or spinal infections, disrupt the spinal column.

The posterolateral fusion is the most commonly performed spinal fusion.  It consists of a surgical exposure of the dorsal elements of the involved spinal segments, followed by preparation of the "fusion bed", and placement of a bone graft.  In essence, the surgeon tries to confuse the body’s normal repair process: by removing the outer shell of bone – the cortex – and exposing the inner portion – the cancellous bone – the body is convinced that the spinal elements have been fractured.  The normal healing response is triggered and the decorticated bone segments are incorporated into a single segment as the body seeks to heal the “fractured” parts. 

The success of the fusion depends on the biological preparation of the fusion bed - the area where new bone is going to form.  Blood supply to the fusion mass comes from the decorticated transverse processes and the surrounding walls of muscle tissue.  Also, the maximal area possible must be decorticated as fusion rates may be related to increased surface area.  Finally, new bone material needs to be placed in the bed - sometimes from allograft (other patients donated, sterilized bone), or autograft (your own bone) taken from the spinal segments being decompressed or transplanted from the iliac crest.  Autograft bone increases the likelihood of fusion success, but harvesting it can take time and cause additional pain.

Failure of the fusion to occur can cause treatment failure.  Nonunion occurs in 5-35% of un-instrumented spinal fusions - fusions carried out by simply placing bone graft into the fusion bed.  Spinal instrumentation (rods and screws) has reduced the failure rate to 5-15%.  Spinal instrumentation allows patients to get up quicker and to mobilize without a cumbersome brace.

Although a variety of novel internal fixation devices have been used since the early 1900’s, pedicle screws, used with fixation rods, have significantly improved the treatment of spinal disorders and have been incorporated into most current implant systems.  The majority of posterolateral fusions performed today are stabilized with a pedicle screw and rod construct.
Picture of pedicle screws and rods in spine
A second option for fusion, particularly useful for degenerative disease at the lowest lumbar levels, is an anterior lumbar interbody fusion, or ALIF.  This procedure approaches the spine through the abdomen, avoiding the nerve roots and spinal canal all together.

From the anterior approach the disc can be removed entirely, and the broad surfaces of the vertebral endplates prepared for fusion.  A variety of cages and graft materials are available for placement into the disc space.  In addition to enhancing the likelihood of fusion, these devices are designed to restore the height and alignment of the diseased spinal segment. 

​Most cages are designed to be filled with bone graft, to enhance the fusion process.  The majority of these devices are intended to be used with supplemental spinal instrumentation, usually posterior screws and rods, placed at a second operation, but many now incorporate an interbody fixation strategy that locks them in place without any need for additional surgery.
Lumbar interbody cage for fusion
​A third approach to lumbar fusion combines the principles of the posterolateral and anterior interbody fusions to give the highest likelihood of a solid fusion and a stable spine.  These procedures are often referred to as “360 degree” fusions because they address the spine from both front and back.  There are three ways to carry out a 360 fusion.

First, the most traditional way of performing a 360 fusion is to carry out a direct ALIF procedure using a cage or spacer, followed by a traditional posterolateral fusion with instrumentation.  Fusion rates are high and success is quite good in well selected patients.  This is a big operation to go through, but the spine is stable at the end of surgery and patients can begin getting out of bed very quickly after surgery.  Newer, minimally invasive techniques now allow surgeons to perform both aspects of the 360 fusion through small, minimally invasive approaches, resulting in less muscle trauma and incisional pain than seen with traditional techniques
Picture of interbody cages used for spine fusion
​The second option is performed through a single posterior approach - often called a "TLIF" (Transforaminal Lumbar Interbody Fusion procedure - obtaining a fusion of the interbody space through the posterior surgical approach.  In this approach the surgeon performs all of the surgery from a posterior approach, frequently taking away all of the overlying bone at the operative level through a laminectomy technique. 

Once the spinal canal is open, the nerves are moved out of the way and the surgeon removes all of the affected disc material from behind, in similar fashion to a discectomy. 
​
Picture of surgical technique for discectomy and fusion
The "disc space" is then packed with bone and a spacer, and the posterior elements fused and instrumented with pedicle screws.  This accomplishes the 360 fusion all from the single posterior approach, but the procedure must be carried out with meticulous technique to avoid irritating or injuring the nerves
Xray of lumbar TLIF and fusion with interbody cage
​The third option is carried out as a minimally invasive approach through the flank, getting at the disc space from the side, behind the abdominal contents, and either fixing the segment in place with a lateral plate or screws, or reinforcing the fusion with screws delivered from behind.  This "XLIF" or "DLIF" approach is suitable for fusions from the L4-L5 level to the lower thoracic spine, but can't be used at the Lumbosacral level. 
XLIF Lumbar fusion illustration showing implant placement (Nuvasive Spine)
​Patients who are good candidates for fusion include those with radiographically proven segmental instability (excessive motion) secondary to disc degeneration, degenerative spondylolisthesis, degenerative scoliosis, post-discectomy degeneration, or instability caused by previous spinal procedures such as laminectomy or facet joint removal.  Other universally accepted indications for lumbar fusion include persistent back and leg pain in the adult related to isthmic spondylolisthesis, adult scoliosis, failed prior surgery, tumor, trauma and infection.  There is good evidence that patients with severe back pain due to these conditions will benefit, often dramatically, from a well performed spinal fusion.
 
There are a number of factors which may have a negative impact on the success of a spinal fusion surgery.  These include:
  • a lack of focal, well defined symptoms of leg pain or back pain,
  • advancing age with poor bone quality and poor fitness,
  • a history of previous low back surgery,
  • increasing number of vertebral levels to be fused,
  • diabetes, and – importantly -
  • tobacco use. 
While neither the patient or the surgeon can do much about the patient’s age, or the fact that they had surgery in the past, every patient can stop smoking.  Stopping tobacco use (stopping nicotine exposure altogether) and the use of pedicle screw instrumentation and autograft bone have been shown to increase fusion rates in tobacco smokers. 
 
There is one area of spinal disease that is not so clear-cut when it comes to either diagnosis or surgical care.  There is currently no area in lumbar spine surgery more controversial than fusion for "discogenic" back pain.  Discogenic pain is pain caused by degeneration or disruption of the disc itself, often with no apparent mechanical instability.  Whereas fusion for instability is thought to reduce pain by stopping abnormal and painful motion, surgery for discogenic pain is thought to work by relieving the disc of its normal loads and stresses, and by removing the painful disc itself.  Despite the difficulty of accurately and reproducibly diagnosing pain caused directly by the damaged disc, many authors have reported successful outcomes in properly selected patients treated with isolated fusions for focal, activity related back pain caused by deteriorating discs. 
 
While fusion for discogenic pain has proven successful in reducing pain and improving function and activity levels in well selected patients, another option has become available which may achieve the same result without resorting to fusion.  Disc arthroplasty, or artificial disc replacement, has been used in Europe for nearly two decades, with steadily improving results with each new design.  Current designs have been under investigation in the United States over the last few years, with very promising results.  In 2004, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the first artificial disc for general use in the treatment of single-level degenerative disc disease and discogenic pain.
 
Disc arthroplasty is carried out through an incision similar to the one used for anterior interbody fusion.  The exposure to the disc is carried out by a surgeon well experienced in anterior spine surgery.  The disc – either L4-L5, or L5 –S1 – is almost completely removed, with care taken to remove all the disc material back to the posterior rim of the vertebral body.  Once the disc space is meticulously prepared, a properly sized implant, consisting of plates that fit the vertebral endplates and a polyethylene spacer that permits a limited degree of motion, is inserted and carefully embedded into the bone
Picture of Prodisc L total disc replacement
​Once the wound is closed, the patient is mobilized immediately; as there is no fusion desired, the patient can be up and about and moving right after surgery.  Results to date have been very encouraging.  Long term results can only be estimated, however, since these implants are new to general use.
 
Spinal Instrumentation
 
In the realm of spinal fusion, spinal instrumentation serves three purposes: 1) it reduces or eliminates the need for external bracing  2) it improves the likelihood of successful fusion  3) it minimizes the number of spinal motion segments that need to be fused. 

​Patients who have instrumentation can be started on more aggressive post-operative rehabilitation and are more easily mobilized.  Addition of rigid instrumentation has also been shown to increase fusion rates in degenerative disease with little increased risk of complications.

Posterior instrumentation consists primarily of pedicle screws and connecting rods.  The pedicle screws are inserted in a very precise manner, entering the vertebral posterior elements at the junction of the transverse process and the inferior rim of the upper facet, and traveling through the interior of the vertebral pedicle into the vertebral body.  Placed correctly, the screw is entirely contained inside the bone, and provides strong fixation to the vertebral body.
CT scan showing perfect pedicle screw placement
Screws placed in adjacent vertebrae are then connected with longitudinal rods, providing an internal splint far more effective than any external brace or cast.
 
Pedicle Screws:
Pedicle screws and rods are used to insure successful posterolateral fusion, and to reduce the number of motion segments that must be fused.  They are placed through the junction of the transverse process and facet, traveling through the inside of the pedicle and into the vertebral body.  Pedicle screws have been used in Europe for more than 40 years and have been shown to be safe and effective when properly and carefully inserted.  Computer assisted navigation and fluoroscopy help limit the risk of a screw being placed in poor alignment, and some surgeons now employ robotic systems to help place the screws accurately and consistently.
Dr. McLain using image guidance during pedicle screw placement
The screws selected are picked according to the size and depth of each vertebral pedicle - the bone that connects the vertebral body in front to the lamina and facet joint in the back.  Screws can be placed "free-hand" with the surgeon creating a starting hole and passing a probe down the pedicle under fluoroscopic control, or under image guidance where the landmarks for starting and finishing screw placement are determined from an imaging system with computer guidance built into the probes and drill systems. 

Most surgeons use a blunt tipped probe to minimize the chance of perforating the pedicle wall as the pilot hole for the screw is created, and then use a ball-tipped probe to directly feel the wall of the pedicle to confirm integrity. 
Picture of pedicle screw surgical technique
​If the bone is intact all around the screw hole, the screw can be placed with excellent safety.  The position of the screw is then double-checked on x-ray or fluoroscopy.
​
With the screws in place the bone graft is applied over the transverse processes and the screws are connected by rods to provide the internal splint that will help the fusion to heal.  Most contemporary systems used in the spine are made from titanium, which heals in well with the surrounding bone, is easier to image around, and does not contain any of the metals that can cause metal allergies or "metallosis".
 
Interbody Cages
Along with pedicle screw placement, the surgeon may elect to perform an interbody fusion using either an ALIF or TLIF approach.

The TLIF is carried out at the time of pedicle screw placement, and requires a laminectomy, which is often already needed to allow discectomy or removal of bone spurs to take pressure off of the nerve roots.  Beginning in an anatomic “safe zone” between the nerve root and the thecal sac, the surgeon removes disc material to complete a full discectomy.  The surgeon then inserts a series of blunt paddles that distract the disc space, restoring the disc space height, correcting sagittal alignment, and creating a space for the fusion cage that is placed next. 
Picture of lumbar fusion surgical technique
​Once maximal distraction has occurred, the pedicle screw fixation nuts are tightened on the working rods to hold the space open.

The surgeon now removes all of the end-plate cartilage from the vertebra on each side of the disc space, and exposes a large surface of bone for fusion.  If too much endplate bone is removed, the interbody cages are more likely to sink into the softer cancellous bone. 
Picture of TLIF fusion technique
Special "shavers" clean away the disc down to bone to insure fusion.
​The prepared interspace is then filled with bone graft material, and an interbody spacer.
​
There are several options for an interbody cage but most cages used now are made of PEEK - a plastic like material that is well tolerated by bone and easy to x-ray through, or titanium, which can be made with a microsurface that bone actually grows into. 
Picture of TLIF lumbar fusion technique
Cage is gently inserted and tapped into the disc space.
​While the goals and fundamental principles are the same for each of the different types of spacer, the application techniques, and the nuances of their use do vary.  This is particularly true of MIS techniques that may include quite unique interbody spacers.

When used in combination with appropriate posterior instrumentation, these cages provide excellent initial stability, allow correction of deformities, and provide a high rate of fusion success.  Radiolucent devices permit us to accurately assess how the graft incorporates and see the interbody fusion.  Successful cage placement and solid fusion requires meticulous preparation of the interspace and endplates, however. 

Before placing the cages, morselized bone graft is packed into the anterior interspace to densely fill that portion of the disc space.  The cage, packed with autograft morsels, is introduced and impacted into place.  The distraction force is released, and the pedicle screws are compressed towards each other to capture the cages and restore lordosis.
 
Things We Worry About During Spinal Surgery
Regardless of surgical strategy or operative approach, complications can occur with any surgical procedure.  Surgeons work hard to prevent as many complications as they can and to anticipate and minimize those that they can’t prevent.

Intraoperative complications can arise from problems with the instrumentation whether it is placed correctly or not.  Injuries to vascular or visceral structures are very rare with pedicle screw fixation, but misplaced pedicle screws may occur in up to 5% of patients.  Many of these screws will cause no problem, work satisfactorily, and not require revision.  Misplacement occurs more frequently in scoliosis and with more inexperienced surgeons and can occasionally injure or irritate a nerve root, requiring another surgery. 

Permanent neurological injury is the most feared complication in spinal surgery.  The rate of injury associated with instrumented lumbar fusions has been seen to be slightly higher than in un-instrumented fusions, but in experienced hands both rates are very low.  Most nerve irritation comes from moving the nerve around during decompression or removal of scar.  When nerve monitoring in the operating room shows that nerve signals have changed during placement of a screw, prompt removal of that screw is indicated.  Nerve or spinal cord injury can be related to pressure on the tissue itself, or damage from a probe or instrument, but can also occur if the patient's blood pressure drops for an extended period.  For this reason spine surgery is often carried out by  anesthesiologists with extensive spine experience.

Injury to the neural tissues may not always injure the nerves, but a tear in the covering (dura) that protects the nerves can be a big problem during surgery as well.  Dural tears result in cerebrospinal fluid leaks, which can occur during decompressive procedures performed to treat nerve compression, require a microsurgical repair with very fine suture to prevent persistent fluid leaks and post-operative headaches 
Picture of dural repair during spine surgery
​Dural tears, or durotomies, are significantly more likely during revision surgery.  Patients suffering a dural tear will have a longer surgery, as the tear is typically repaired using an operating microscope.  They will also spend a little more time in bed after surgery, to let the tear seal before standing up.  If the leak persists, the patient may experience headaches, similar to "myelogram headaches", necessitating further treatment to seal the tear.

Finally, the most common complication, and a serious complication in any patient, is infection.  Patients undergoing any kind of procedure that breaks the skin - even an injection - have a risk of getting an infection.  And the usual bacterial agents that cause infection are the ones we can't get completely away from...the ones that live on our own skin.  All the preoperative methods we use to sterilize the incision site, our instruments, and our gown and gloves greatly reduces the risk of infection, but that risk is never down to zero. 

So we take several precautions to reduce that risk as low as we can.  It is routine nowadays (standard of care) for Orthopaedic patients to receive a dose of appropriate antibiotics, by IV, prior to the start of surgery, and if the surgery is long or complex, they may get additional doses. 

Many surgeons will add to antibiotic coverage by washing the wound with an antibiotic solution prior to closure, and others will apply an antibiotic medication into the depths of the wound itself.  Proper post-operative wound care keeps the wound clean and safe until the skin has a chance to seal and protect itself.

Still, there is a measurable rate of superficial wound infections that require examination and oral antibiotics, and a small but never "zero" number of patients that develop a deep infection that requires re-operation and hospitalization, along with long-term antibiotics, no matter what strategy is used.  Patients with excess body weight, diabetes, impaired immunity, smokers, and those undergoing revision of older surgeries are all at increased risk.
 
 
Post-operative Care and Activities
Patients undergoing posterior instrumentation for degenerative disorders, spondylolisthesis, or discogenic pain, are really quite stable after surgery and need only a corset for comfort after their operation.  Those with more post-operative instability, due to removal of a tumor or treatment of a fracture, may benefit from external bracing, such as a thoracolumbosacral orthosis, (TLSO).  Depending on the number of levels treated, the extent of blood loss, and the patient's baseline health, hospitalization and physical therapy may be needed, but many single level and minimally invasive spinal fusions can be carried out as outpatient surgeries, with patients up at bedside an hour after anesthesia and home later the same day.

Patients who have undergone more extensive or anterior/posterior surgeries will generally be fully ambulatory within 2-3 days postoperatively unless neurologic problems or other medical problems exist that interfere. The patient can expect "surgical" pain for approximately 5 to 7 days after surgery, and some pain for up to 6 weeks should be expected as muscles recover from the injury of the operation.
 
Patients with a stable spine, and those with a combined anterior and posterior reconstruction wear their brace to protect muscles during the early healing phase, but can be up without it with little fear of problems.  These patients can advance activities as tolerated, can bend to put their socks and shoes on, and can begin lifting and carrying limited loads within a week of surgery.  They may discontinue the brace after 4 – 6 weeks, but often find the support helpful when increasing activities thereafter.  They can start back to light duty work at three to six weeks from surgery, and should be back to full duty or to active physical therapy by 12 weeks.  Patients with spinal instability or poor bone quality may need to wear their TLSO for up to 4 months, and will also be fitted with a bone stimulator that aids the bone formation process.

Patients may ambulate to tolerance and are encouraged to walk up to 2 miles per day. Riding in a car is fine, but driving is not recommended for approximately 4-6 weeks. Heavy lifting (objects over 15 pounds) should be avoided for the first 6 weeks. At 6 weeks, bicycle or treadmill activity may be added to the physical therapy program, as well as increased walking and stair climbing. Work hardening, depending on job classification, is begun at 12 to 24 weeks. Light‑duty work activities are begun at 3 - 6 weeks and heavy‑duty, unrestricted activities at 3 - 6 months depending on the patient and the job.  
 
The surgical implants (screws and rods or plates) are only necessary during the fusion period. Once the spine is fused these devices become more or less redundant. Currently, surgeons rarely remove the implants unless the components are prominent under the skin or have become loose in the face of a failed fusion.
 
Conclusion
Surgical care for back pain is more about the correction of instability, deformity, disc disruption, or decompression of nerve elements, and less about "fixing pain".  If the basic problem is one of the above, then the pain is very likely to improve or resolve when the underlying problem is fixed.

Spine surgeons go to lengths (sometimes frustrating lengths) to make sure your pain is coming from a correctable, treatable cause, and then to plan the operation that will eliminate that problem and the pain safely and reliably.
Picture of lumbar disc replacement x-ray
15 years after lumbar disc replacement patient has no back or leg pain and no adjacent level degenerative changes.
​Understanding your diagnosis, and what the goals of surgical treatment are, as well as understanding what recovery and rehabilitation will entail, will help you make good decisions and get good results if you have a back pain problem that requires spinal surgery.
 
I hope you have found this overview interesting and informative.  If you have a problem that you think may require surgical treatment, or have been told you need surgery or fusion, I would be glad to see you in my Cleveland office.  If you have suggestions or comments about this article, please let me know in the comments below.
 
Thanks!

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12/23/2022

Post-operative Instructions for Dr. McLain's Patients: Part 2: The Lumbar Spine

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What to do after Lumbar Spine Surgery
If you read Part 1, you know the general principles I'm going to get to here, but you may still be wondering what to do to take care of your wound in the first weeks after lumbar spine surgery.

The most common source of confusion after lumbar surgery revolves around what kind of surgery a patient may have had.  And, in this case, any confusion is usually the result of confusing spinal decompression surgery - microdiscectomy or laminectomy - with spinal fusion surgery.

So here's what you need to know about post-operative care following lumbar surgery:

Wound Care After Lower Back (Lumbar) Surgery - For All Patients:
​

The sterile dressing applied in the Operating Room needs to be left in place for four to six days.  If there is a little blood on the dressing do not worry about it, but if the dressing becomes soaked or loose, it can be reinforced with a bulky cover dressing until it can be peeled away with clean hands and a new gauze pad placed over the surface dressing. Tape this back in place and keep it clean.
Dr McLain's illustration of microdiscectomy surgery
Microdiscectomy involves removing a small amount of bone so that the herniated disc can be safely removed
Do not get the dressing wet.  You may shower after three days, but cover the dressing with saran and tape and avoid directly soaking it.  DO NOT take a tub bath or submerge the wound in water until fully healed and sealed - 10 - 12 days.

After 4-6 days, you may remove the outer dressing and cover the inner dressing with gauze for comfort or leave open to air.

If you find a piece of suture protruding from the skin don't fiddle with it.  The surgical closure for my lumbar wounds, just as with my cervical incisions, is a plastic surgery closure with stitches that are absorbable.  The small knot tied on the skin will blow away after the stitches have resorbed.

If the wound is sore, you may place a bit of ice in a bag (a bag of frozen peas works great) for a bit to reduce swelling and pain.  Do not put ice directly on your skin.

At ten to twelve days the wound should be completely sealed and you can peel away or wash away any remaining dressing over the wound, or you can leave it to peel away on its own.
​
Slight bleeding from the wound may persist for 3 -5 days after surgery, but should then stop.  Continued drainage, drainage that starts up again after the wound appeared to seal, or swelling redness, or increasing pain at the incision site are all things I want to hear about, so please call the office early in the day before things become severe, or go to your emergency room for an examination.
​
Dr McLain's illustration of spine surgery
Lumbar hemilaminotomy allows enough room to remove a herniated disc
For Lumbar Discectomy and Laminectomy Patients:

If you've had a discectomy, Microdiscectomy or laminectomy, without a fusion(this means the surgeon felt your spine was stable and back pain wasn't the biggest issue) follow these instructions.

Care and activity after a lumbar decompression surgery  is VERY DIFFERENT from care after a lumbar fusion!  I discuss these four points with every single patient I operate on.
  1. After surgery, fusion patients do need to avoid back motion, and limit bending, lifting and twisting for several weeks, but the discectomy patient does not need to limit motion for as long or as completely, and they should start gentle range of motion as soon as they are comfortable (3-5 days).
  2. After surgery, fusion patients may need to wear a rigid brace, full time, for several weeks, but the discectomy or laminectomy patient usually needs no brace, or may wear a soft corset for only three weeks before starting light activities.
  3. After surgery, fusion patients need to avoid anti-inflammatory medications (NSAIDs) for eight to twelve weeks, but the discectomy or laminectomy  patient can take NSAIDs, and they can start using NSAIDs (Advil, Aleve, Ibuprofen, Naprosyn, etc) to treat back and muscular pain after the first week following surgery.
  4. And finally - if fusion patients overdo it after surgery or don't follow instructions they can harm themselves, seriously affect their result, and end up needing more surgery.  If discectomy or laminectomy patients overdo it, get active too soon, or don't follow advice, they tend to make themselves sore, but they won't harm themselves or damage the spine unless they persist despite pain and against advice, in activities that subject them to heavy loads or repetitive bending and twisting.
 
Post-Operative Care for Lumbar Discectomy/Laminectomy Patients:

The first one-two weeks after surgery are about getting over the incisional pain.  Lumbar incisions traumatize a lot of muscle and muscular/incisional pain can be severe and can persist for weeks.

Patients should limit bending, lifting, and twisting activity during the first two weeks to avoid aggravating the healing wound and causing pain at the surgical site.  Standing, walking, and careful bending will not cause any injury or damage, but over-activity may aggravate incisional pain.  If that happens, the patient should back off, rest a bit, and ice the site before they get going again.
​
Back Brace: A corset is provided after lumbar disc surgery to wear while the incision is healing, but only for the first few weeks until muscle pain is under control. It is not used at night, when eating, or during light daily activities – gentle frequent motion is desirable. And after 3-4 weeks, we will want to have you take it off and start working on strengthening your back muscles!
Picture of press-up exercise for back physical therapy
Activities:

After discharge from the hospital - right from the start:
Every day, get up and walk three to four times every day– Walk briskly, fifteen to thirty minutes without stopping to sit down – indoors or out, as tolerated.  Bend carefully, but bend to put on your own slippers or shoes.  Limit lifting, but feel safe lifting and carrying 5 – 10lbs as needed.

After 7 - 10 days:
Increase daily walking, and start back to regular exercise on treadmill or exercise bike.  Start gentle range of motion exercise – flexion/extension and side bending – within the range of pain-free motion.

Increase normal bending and gentle twisting during light activities at home. 

When back motion is comfortable and you are no longer taking pain medications, you may start driving short distances. You may increase lifting and carrying up to 10 – 15 lbs as comfortable.

Add activities a little at a time, and don’t overdo it.  Change positions every half-hour. When you go back to a common activity, do a bit for 15 minutes then stop, rest, and reassess: If you're starting to stiffen up, knock off for the day.  If you feel good, you can take on more.

At three weeks:
Return to Dr. McLain’s Clinic for your post-operative x-rays and check-up.  Start light daily activities without restrictions.  Increase walking and exercise activities, and increase bending and lifting as tolerated for light activities in the house. 

Aerobic activity as tolerated – may start running if you like, increase cycling, or add a pool program.

At six weeks:
Return to Dr. McLain’s Clinic for your post-operative check-up.  If all is well, we’ll start home or formal Physical Therapy for the lower back and core strengthening, flexibility, and conditioning.

Recommended Physical Therapy Exercises After Week Four to Six for Cervical Total Disc Replacement Patients:
Daily activity, and a regular aerobic exercise program, are the keys to getting most people back to good function, and are important in all neck and back surgery patients.  Time invested in a physical therapy and exercise program is never wasted.
 
For Lumbar FUSION Patients:
​
X-ray showing successful lumbar fusion
​If you've had a Lumbar Fusion, (most often a Posterior Decompression and Fusion or TLIF) follow these instructions:
​
  1. After surgery, fusion patients do need to avoid back motion for several weeks, and cannot start back range of motion until the fusion has had a chance to get started (4-6 weeks).
  2. After surgery, fusion patients may need to wear a rigid back brace, full time, for several weeks, and should take it off only to bathe, and later when they sleep.
  3. After surgery, fusion patients need to avoid anti-inflammatory medications (NSAIDs) for eight to twelve weeks, as these medications (Advil, Aleve, Ibuprofen, Naprosyn, etc) can interfere with the fusion.
  4. And finally - if fusion patients overdo it after surgery or don't follow instructions they can harm themselves, seriously affect their result, and end up needing more surgery.  Pushing forward too fast, cheating on brace-wear or restrictions, or cigarette smoking increases the risk of a non-union (pseudarthrosis) or can even cause the fixation implants to loosen or break.  That would mean more surgery.
 
Post-Operative Care for Lumbar Fusion Patients:
The first one-two weeks after any surgery are dedicated to getting over the post-operative pain.  Patients should limit activity to avoid aggravating the healing wound and causing pain at the surgical site, and to avoid stressing the fusion before it has had a chance to get started. 

Standing, walking, and careful bending will not cause any injury or damage, but over-activity may aggravate incisional pain or slow or disrupt the early fusion, which can lead to a surgical failure.  Patients can safely bend to put their socks and shoes on, but must avoid repetitive bending, lifting, and twisting.

Activities:
After discharge from the hospital - right from the start:
Every day, get up and walk three to four times every day– Walk briskly, fifteen to thirty minutes without stopping to sit down – indoors or out, as tolerated.  Bend carefully, but bend to put on your own slippers or shoes.  Limit lifting, but feel safe lifting and carrying 10 – 15lbs as needed.

After 7 - 10 days:
Increase daily walking, and start back to light exercise on treadmill or exercise bike.  Do not start trying back exercises or back range of motion exercises yet.
​
Increase normal bending and twisting of the lower back during light activities at home.  
Picture of pedicle screws and rods being placed in a lumbar spine model
Placing pedicle screw and rods in a demonstration model.
At three weeks:
Return to Dr. McLain’s Clinic for your post-operative x-rays and check-up.  Start light daily activities with restrictions.  Increase walking and exercise activities, and increase bending and lifting as tolerated for light activities in the house.  Continue wearing your collar as instructed.  Patients with a desk or phone job can work from home or be driven to work for light duty as tolerated. 

Aerobic activity as tolerated – may start treadmill or elliptical exercise if you like, increase stationary cycling, but cannot add a pool program that involves swimming until fusion is solid and range of motion is restored.

At six weeks:
Return to Dr. McLain’s Clinic for your post-operative check-up and more x-rays.  If all is well, we’ll start weaning you out of the back brace and plan to start a formal Physical Therapy Program for back and core strengthening, flexibility, and conditioning for week eight to ten.

Recommended Physical Therapy Exercises After Week Eight to Ten for Cervical Fusion Patients:
Daily activity, and a regular aerobic exercise program, are the keys to getting most people back to good function, whether they've had a disc removal, a lumbar fusion, or treatment for a fracture or other disorder.

You can learn more about disc replacement surgery, and other types of spine surgery and treatment, by checking out more sections of this website, or find me on Linkedin or Facebook at Robert McLain MD.  Thanks!
​

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12/23/2022

Post-operative Instructions: Part 1: Cervical Spine Patients

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What to do after Cervical Spine Surgery
My office often gets calls from patients who've just gone home from the OR, wondering what they should do to take care of their wound and what their restrictions are in the first weeks after the operation.

Usually these are questions that were addressed at one point or another before or after the operation, but there's a lot to digest so some of the finer points can be easily forgotten.  More often, my patients remember what I told them, but get conflicting instructions from someone else - the recovery room nurse, the scheduler, a family member or next door neighbor! - who tells them firmly "Oh No No No - you can't do THAT, you have to do THIS" and gets them confused and upset.

The MOST COMMON source of confusion is advice or instruction, provided by a nurse or health care provider, that's intended for a patient who had a completely different kind of surgery.  And, when it comes to cervical spine surgery the confusion is usually between Cervical fusion and Cervical disc replacement.

First of all, each of my patients should get a PRINTED handout with the most simple instructions, given at the time of discharge, specific to their treatment and my recommendations.  If you aren't offered this, ask for it, it's available.
​
Second, follow the instructions I provide you which are specific to your condition and your kind of surgery -
Picture of cervical artificial disc showing M6 cervical disc arthroplasty
The M6 artificial disc is one of several FDA approved devices for cervical disc replacement
So here's what you need to know:

Wound Care After Neck Surgery - For All Patients:
The sterile dressing applied in the Operating Room needs to be left in place for three to four days.  If there is a little blood on the dressing do not worry about it, but if the dressing becomes soaked or loose, it can be peeled away with clean hands and a new gauze pad placed over the surface dressing. Tape this back in place and keep it clean.

Do not get the dressing wet.  You may shower after three days, but cover the dressing with saran and tape and avoid directly soaking it.  DO NOT take a tub bath or submerge the wound in water until fully healed and sealed - 10 - 12 days.

After 3-4 days, you may remove the outer dressing and cover the inner dressing with gauze for comfort or leave open to air.
 
If you find a piece of suture protruding from the skin don't fiddle with it.  The surgical closure for my wounds is a plastic surgery closure and the stitches are absorbable.  The small knot tied on the skin will blow away after the stitches have resorbed.

If the wound is sore, you may place a bit of ice in a bag (a bag of frozen peas works great) for a bit to reduce swelling and pain.  Do not put ice directly on your skin.

At ten to twelve days the wound should be completely sealed and you can peel away or wash away any remaining dressing over the wound, or you can leave it to peel away on its own.
​
Slight bleeding from the wound may persist for 3 -5 days after surgery, but should then stop.  Continued drainage, drainage that starts up again after the wound appeared to seal, or swelling redness, or increasing pain at the incision site are all things I want to hear about, so please call the office early in the day before things become severe, or go to your emergency room for an examination.
X-ray picture showing cervical artificial disc
Disc arthroplasty fills the space left behind after disc removal with an implant that preserves motion.
For Cervical Total Disc Arthroplasty Patients:

If you've had a Cervical Disc Replacement, (remember, this operation is also call a cervical disc arthroplasty or artificial disc) follow these instructions.

Care and activity after a cervical disc replacement is VERY DIFFERENT from care after a cervical fusion (ACDF)!  I discuss these four points with every single patient I operate on.

Healthcare providers (nurses/doctors/PT's/family members) make the following mistakes constantly:

  1. After surgery, fusion patients do need to avoid neck motion for several weeks, but the disc replacement patient does not need to keep their head still, and they should start gentle range of motion as soon as they are comfortable (2-3 days).
  2. After surgery, fusion patients do need to wear a rigid cervical collar, full time, for several weeks, but the disc replacement patient wears a soft cervical collar for only five to seven days and should then take it off and put it away.
  3. After surgery, fusion patients need to avoid anti-inflammatory medications (NSAIDs) for eight to twelve weeks, but the disc replacement patient can and should take an NSAID daily, and they should start using NSAIDs (Advil, Aleve, Ibuprofen, Naprosyn, etc) to treat neck and muscular pain after the first week following surgery.
  4. And finally - if fusion patients overdo it after surgery or don't follow instructions they can harm themselves, seriously affect their result, and end up needing more surgery.  If disc replacement patients overdo it, get active too soon, or don't follow advice, they may make themselves really sore, but they won't harm themselves or damage the implant, and they will just need to back off, use ice and NSAIDs, and limit activity until  they are comfortable again.
 
Post-Operative Care for Cervical Total Disc Arthroplasty Patients:
​

The first one to two weeks after any surgery are dedicated to getting over the incisional pain.  Patients should limit range of motion and activity a little bit to avoid aggravating the healing wound and causing pain at the surgical site.  Standing, walking, and careful bending will not cause any injury or damage, but over-activity may aggravate incisional pain.  If that happens, the patient should back off, rest a bit, and ice the site before they get going again.
Cervical Collar: A collar is provided after cervical disc replacement to wear while the incision is healing, but only for the first 5-7 days. It is not used at night, when eating, or during normal daily activities – gentle frequent motion is desirable. And after 5-7 days, take it off and put it in the closet!
Activities:
                After discharge from the hospital - right from the start:
Every day, get up and walk three to four times every day– Walk briskly, fifteen to thirty minutes without stopping to sit down – indoors or out, as tolerated.  Bend carefully, but bend to put on your own slippers or shoes.  Limit lifting, but feel safe lifting and carrying 5 – 10lbs as needed.

After 7 - 10 days:
Increase daily walking, and start back to regular exercise on treadmill or exercise bike.  Start gentle range of motion exercise – flexion/extension, side bending, right and left rotation – within the range of pain-free motion.

Increase normal bending and twisting during light activities at home. 

When neck motion is comfortable and head can turn to look over each shoulder patient may start driving short distances. May increase lifting and carrying to 10 – 15 lbs as comfortable.

Add activities a little at a time, and don’t overdo it.  With cervical surgery prolonged sitting with head in one fixed position - reading, watching TV, working at the computer – can result in stiffness and pain.  Change positions every half-hour.

At three weeks:
Return to Dr. McLain’s Clinic for your post-operative x-rays and check-up.  Start light daily activities without restrictions.  Increase walking and exercise activities, and increase bending and lifting as tolerated for light activities in the house. 

Aerobic activity as tolerated – start running if you like, increase cycling, or add a pool program.
Start gentle isometrics exercises for neck strengthening and start shoulder shrugs and shoulder rolls with 5 - 10 pounds in each hand, twice a day as tolerated.

At six weeks:
Return to Dr. McLain’s Clinic for your post-operative check-up.  If all is well, we’ll start home or formal Physical Therapy for upper back and shoulder girdle strengthening, flexibility, and conditioning.
​
Recommended Physical Therapy Exercises After Week Four to Six for Cervical Total Disc Replacement Patients:
Daily activity, and a regular aerobic exercise program, are the keys to getting most people back to good function, and are important in all neck and back surgery patients.  Time invested in a physical therapy and exercise program are never wasted.


​For Cervical FUSION Patients:

Picture of cervical fusion x-ray
Cervical fusion involves placing an implant between the vertebrae and a plate and screws along the front of the spine.
If you've had a Cervical Fusion, (most often an Anterior Cervical Discectomy and Fusion or ACDF) follow these instructions.
Healthcare providers (nurses/doctors/PT's/family members) usually know more about fusion than disc replacement and ar usually going to give you the following instructions correctly:
  1. After surgery, fusion patients do need to avoid neck motion for several weeks, and cannot start neck range of motion until the fusion has had a chance to get started (4-6 weeks).
  2. After surgery, fusion patients do need to wear a rigid cervical collar, full time, for several weeks, and should take it off only to shave or bathe, and later when they eat.
  3. After surgery, fusion patients need to avoid anti-inflammatory medications (NSAIDs) for eight to twelve weeks, as these medications (Advil, Aleve, Ibuprofen, Naprosyn, etc) can interfere with the fusion.
  4. And finally - if fusion patients overdo it after surgery or don't follow instructions they can harm themselves, seriously affect their result, and end up needing more surgery.  Pushing forward too fast, cheating on brace-wear or restrictions, or cigarette smoking can lead to a non-union or even cause the fixation implants, such as cervical fixation plates, to loosen or break.  That would mean more surgery.
Picture of a custom cervical fixation plate
Post-Operative Care for Cervical Fusion (ACDF) Patients:

The first one-two weeks after any surgery are dedicated to getting over the incisional pain.  Patients should limit activity to avoid aggravating the healing wound and causing pain at the surgical site, and to avoid stressing the fusion before it has had a chance to get started.  Standing, walking, and careful bending will not cause any injury or damage, but over-activity may aggravate incisional pain or initiate a surgical failure.  You can safely bend to put your socks and shoes on, but avoid repetitive bending, lifting, and all twisting.

Cervical Collar:
A hard or soft collar is provided after cervical fusion depending on the type of instrumentation used and your bone quality.  During the first 3 weeks this brace is to be worn full time, including  at night, when eating, or during normal daily activities – and any motion of the head and neck should be avoided when the collar is taken on or off.  And after 3 -6 weeks, we will start weaning you out of the brace, but you should never take it off and put it away just because you "Feel ok"!

Activities:
After discharge from the hospital - right from the start:
Every day, get up and walk three to four times every day– Walk briskly, fifteen to thirty minutes without stopping to sit down – indoors or out, as tolerated.  Bend carefully, but bend to put on your own slippers or shoes.  Limit lifting, but feel safe lifting and carrying 5 – 10lbs as needed.

After 7 - 10 days:
Increase daily walking, and start back to light exercise on treadmill or exercise bike.  Start gentle shoulder range of motion exercise – shoulder shrugs – within the range of pain-free motion. Do not start trying neck exercises or neck range of motion exercises yet.

Increase normal bending and twisting of the lower back during light activities at home. 

At three weeks:
Return to Dr. McLain’s Clinic for your post-operative x-rays and check-up.  Start light daily activities with restrictions.  Increase walking and exercise activities, and increase bending and lifting as tolerated for light activities in the house.  Continue wearing your collar as instructed.

Aerobic activity as tolerated – may start treadmill or elliptical exercise if you like, increase stationary cycling, but do not try to add a pool program that involves swimming until out of the collar and limber.

At six weeks:
Return to Dr. McLain’s Clinic for your post-operative check-up and more x-rays.  If all is well, we’ll start weaning you out of the collar and plan a formal Physical Therapy Program for upper back and shoulder girdle strengthening, flexibility, and conditioning.

Recommended Physical Therapy Exercises After Week Eight to Ten for Cervical Fusion Patients:
Daily activity, and a regular aerobic exercise program, are the keys to getting most people back to good function, whether they've had a disc replacement, a cervical fusion, or a posterior cervical operation.
​
I hope that answers all your important questions!  Thanks for reading and feel free to share with anyone you think might benefit.  If you like the content, let me know what other questions you might have!

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12/16/2022

What's a "Clinical Trial" and Why Should I Consider Participating? Part 3:

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So why would you want to sign up for a study like the ongoing SMART Trial?
OK, lets talk about my surgical practice specifically.  In the studies I participate in, patients are signing up to get AT LEAST the best implant and surgery available under FDA guidelines today, and they have AN OPPORTUNITY to get the next-generation implant, not currently available to other patients for this specific application.

In the studies I participate in, like the ongoing SMART trial sponsored by Centinel Spine and carried out under the strictest FDA guidelines, the implant devices are not new to the market - they have been in use for years, sometimes more than a decade, outside the US or for more limited application in the US, and have already passed several levels of clinical validation and safety testing.  For instance, in the ongoing SMART trial for two-level cervical disc replacements, one of the "test" implants (C-Vivo) has been in use since 2009, and has been used over 25,000 times around the world before being selected for the ongoing two-level study. ​
Picture of Centinel Spine artificial discs for cervical spine arthroplasty
The two Centinel Spine implants included in the SMART artificial disc trial studying two-level cervical disc replacement.
​In fact, that implant is FDA approved for single level use in the US at this time.  The other study implant (C-SK) is a modification of the FDA approved device that has been used for single level disc replacement in the US for the last 15 years, with over 100,000 successful implantations.  And the Control device?  That is the Mobi C implant that is one of the most widely used disc replacement devices in the world, and the implant I use almost exclusively for two-level surgery for all other patients.
Picture of cervical spine x-ray after two-level cervical disc replacement
Two level disc replacement with MobiC implants, FDA approved for cervical disc arthroplasty at two levels.
The SMART Trial itself is very specific, and it's studying a procedure that, currently, is not an option for most patients.  The only patients that could participate are those with two-level cervical disc herniations or disc degeneration, with persistent neck and arm pain severe enough to warrant surgical care.  The trial isn't for patients with a single level disc herniation, and it can't include patients with several levels of degeneration, a previous fusion, or such severe disc disease that the spine has become rigid or deformed.  There are good treatments for those problems, but the clinical trial isn't the place for those patients. 

Patients in the SMART Trial are randomized to one of two treatment groups.  Both groups get exactly the same preoperative and post-operative care and follow-up, but one group will get the Study Implants (prodisc C Vivo or prodisc C SK) and one group will receive the Mobi-C implant at the time of surgery.

Picture of cervical artificial disc with model
The technique for surgery is the same, the surgical time is the same and the post-operative care and activity levels are the same.  Patients that don't care to enroll in the study, or don't qualify, will still get the same preoperative care and preparation as any surgical patient, and if they choose to go through with disc replacement surgery, they will receive the same Mobi-C implants at the time of their surgery, delivered in the same way.

The further advantage for some patients is that, if they are having trouble getting approval for surgical treatment because of insurance or other issues, the study sponsor will often cover some or all of the costs of treatment and follow-up.  This means that any patient that is indicated for the surgery and motivated to participate can have an opportunity regardless of their financial status or insurance situation.

Is a clinical trial right for you? It depends on what you are suffering from, and what your circumstances are, to some extent, but it always depends on whether you are comfortable with the study and really want to participate.  If you are interested in this study, I'd invite you to contact my study coordinator, Jayson Zadzilka, or call 330-205-1334.

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12/10/2022

What's a "Clinical Trial" and Why Should I Consider Participating? Part 2:

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So, why would you consider participating in a Clinical Trial?
In many cases, the reason a new product has been introduced is that flaws have been recognized in the existing "state of the art".  Over years of use, in large numbers of patients, even the best devices and treatment strategies prove to have weaknesses or inadequacies.  

Newer technologies or materials can sometimes eliminate these weaknesses without much change in the base design, but may still require an extensive study before being "approved" by the FDA for distribution.  The willingness to accept the theoretical  risk of a well studied newer technique in order to avoid the known risks of an existing treatment is one reason a patient may at least consider their options.
​
In other cases, advances in engineering or material science make the reliability of the newer implant considerably better than the existing product, which may have been designed decades ago and remain essentially unchanged for many years.  Newer technologies, such as 3-D printing, have so changed the ability to fabricate a metal implant that the whole design and technique for implant placement may change, and may require renewed trials.
Picture of artificial disc in hand
Model of cervical artificial disc showing articulating surface of the metal cup and the polyethylene spacer.
And, naturally, after any implant or technique has been in use for several years, surgeons and designers recognize ways to improve it and to eliminate problems that may have emerged after thousands of cases or many years.  Simply changing the surface texture or the base material of an original design may require resubmission, and real changes in structure or geometry almost always will.  Again, wanting the upgraded design rather than the old standard is important to many patients.

​Why are these studies even necessary?

Recent failures of some very promising hip replacement implants drove the FDA to increase their demands on manufacturers.  Companies developing and producing Orthopaedic implants, here or overseas, now have to show the FDA that a new implant is backed up by valid scientific evidence showing that it is safe and effective for its intended use. The FDA also requires implant companies to get the agency’s approval before making any changes to the implant, its labels, or even what metals are used and how it’s manufactured. Manufacturers have to report the ongoing safety results of these implants to the FDA every year.

Prior to these current requirements, for instance, metal-on-metal total hip replacement implants were cleared through a different process. Manufacturers did not have to prove their new design was safe and effective, merely show that it was “substantially similar” to a proven device already on the market. 

However, manufacturers stopped making and distributing the metal-on-metal hip implant products and issued extensive recalls after thousands of patients developed a complication called metallosis, a reaction to metal particles rarely seen after Orthopaedic procedures prior to the use of metal on metal hip joints.  Because metallosis didn't become apparent until years after the implants were put in, that meant that thousands of patients suffered injuries and required revision surgery to replace the hips.

As of March 2019, there are no metal-on-metal hip replacements approved for use in the United States.
 
What does a patient have to do if they agree to participate in a Clinical Trial?
They have to fit the INCLUSION CRITERIA - they have to be of the right age, with the right kind of problem, and the right symptoms to qualify for the procedure being studied.  For the ongoing SMART spinal implant study, that means having a relatively specific kind of problem in the right part of the spine - a one or two level disc herniation or degeneration in the cervical spine, for instance.  
Picture of spine anatomy
They can't fit any of the EXCLUSION CRITERIA - complicating medical problems such as poor bone quality, infections or tumors, heart or lung disease, for instance, have had previous surgery, be pregnant or plan on becoming pregnant (sometimes) during the course of the treatment, or be of the "wrong" age or gender, if age or gender are a critical issue in the study.  Patients may be excluded from the study if they have too much disease - degeneration at many levels of the spine, or such bad arthritis that the spine has become rigid or deformed, for instance, but should never be excluded because of their ethnicity, background, or social circumstances.

They must WANT TO participate - no study like this is ever intended to coerce a patient into participation!  No matter what the circumstance, patients can choose to participate, or to leave the study anytime they wish.  On the other hand, any time a patient stops participating, they are counted as a failure for their treatment group, so it's important that the study only enrolls patients that really understand their obligations and really want to participate.

They must be able to FOLLOW-UP at the appropriate times after the study so that their results can be accurately assessed and recorded. That means patients that have to travel long distances for visits, or who are planning to move out of the area after surgery, or have other issues that make their regular return unlikely, aren't good candidates for inclusion in most studies.  Many studies do provide compensation for time and travel to help patients make it to their important follow-up visits.

They must be comfortable with the decision process that will determine which treatment they will receive.  In studies of Orthopaedic and spinal implants, the comparison of two different implants often involves a RANDOMIZATION process which determines that the group of patients getting Implant A is as similar to those receiving Implant B as possible.  Randomization is usually carried out by someone other than the surgeon or study team, so that there is as little bias in the process as possible.  This process is often "blinded" such that the patient won't know until later in the study which implant they received, and sometimes from the study team until the day of surgery.  This insures that every patient gets the same care and attention though-out their care, no matter which group they are in.

For more information about patient participation in FDA approved Clinical Trials go to: Clinical Center NIH

Thanks for reading. Let me know if you have other questions about clinical trials or spine surgery in general!

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12/9/2022

What's a "Clinical Trial" and Why Should I Consider Participating? Part 1:

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The Clinical Trial - What's it all about

A Clinical Trial is a very common type of research study to determine the safety and effectiveness of a new treatment or type of implant, usually in comparison to the already established standard of care.  The study is usually a very carefully monitored process, and most surgical trials are monitored by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) or similar agency to insure that the patient's safety and health are carefully protected.

​But it's still "experimental", right?

Picture of spine model
To some extent, whenever you try to answer a question of "Is Implant A better than Implant B?" or "Does Drug #1 work as well as Drug #2?" you are performing an experiment.  However, depending on how much research work has been done prior to asking that question, investigators may have almost certainty about the answer, or at least know that the answer won't be "worse than" the standard of care ("Standard of Care" is the most universally accepted treatment currently available).

There are some situations where the certainty of the outcome isn't assured: treatment of serious and frequently lethal disease, like some cancers, may warrant a trial of a new chemotherapy or other treatment that hasn't been widely tested before, particularly if what is already available is known to be of limited value.  In those cases, patients - and their doctors, -  may be willing to take the risk that the new treatment may have a side effects because they know that the existing treatments just aren't very successful.

For less dire circumstances, such as for treatment of back pain or neck pain, new treatments are constantly being proposed and evaluated in smaller studies, but by the time a large Clinical Trial is proposed, there is usually a large body of evidence that

-  1. The new treatment is at least as good as existing treatments;
-  2. The new treatment is as safe as the existing treatments; and
- 3. The new treatment provides results that won't deteriorate or cause harm over the foreseeable life of the implant or treatment.

Not all new products or procedures go through a formal clinical trial before reaching the market, and some physicians and surgeons will offer treatment with implants or applications that are "off-label", or - in other words - not specifically approved by the FDA for the use being recommended.  This is not always a reckless or questionable approach.  For instance, for years the most commonly used hip replacement implants were used "off-label" because hip replacement was known in clinical practice to be so much better than the alternatives (hip fusion) that it would have been unethical to ask some patients to go through the older and clearly inferior treatment as part of a trial.  But that's what would have been required to generate a useful experimental proof.

In that sense, no-one has ever proven that parachutes are really useful.  There's lots of clinical evidence, but you can't really prove it because you can't find anyone for the control group - people willing to jump out of the plane without a parachute!  So surgical trials are designed and strictly overseen to make sure that neither treatment group is exposed to a known and unnecessary additional risk.
​
If a company wants to have the approval of the FDA to market a new device or technique for a specific disease or problem in the US, one of the final steps in insuring that the product is safe and satisfactory is to invite patients to enroll in a study (Clinical Trial) that will compare the new implant or technique to the most widely accepted and carefully validated option currently available, (Standard of Care).  Before such a study is initiated, the new device has usually been through extensive laboratory testing, materials testing, cadaver experiments, and fatigue testing, and in many cases has already been in use in other parts of the world, sometimes for years.  In some cases the new device is already FDA approved for use in the United States, but hasn't been used in the proposed technique before.  Either way, there may 10's of thousands of surgical cases already available for review and analysis before a Multicenter Clinical Trial can be approved.

So, even though any investigation or Clinical Trial has some aspect of experimentation to it, the risks have been minimized to the extent that the reward of participation may far outweigh that risk.

If you want to know more about any clinical trial you've read about or been offered participation in, you can learn all about the study and others like by going to
  https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04012996..

Thanks for reading. Let me know if you have other questions about clinical trial or spine surgery in general!

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11/19/2022

Five reasons your Spine Surgeons may recommend different operations:

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There are usually several possible treatment approaches to any spinal disorder, and depending on the severity of the case, the age and health of the patient, and the experience of the surgeon, there’s usually more than one way to approach a given surgical problem.

​If you’re getting a second opinion about spine surgery, it’s usually for one of two reasons – either you didn’t like what you heard the first time, or you want to make sure the recommendations you got are as right as they can possibly be.
 
So, when you get a completely different recommendation from your second opinion doctor you have to wonder: how can two experts see the same x-rays, hear the same story, examine the same body, and come to such different conclusions!?
 
McLain illustration of spinal surgery for thoracic disc herniation
​It can be as simple as this: One surgeon may be more familiar with your specific condition and have more experience treating it. They may have trained in a program that treated this problem extensively and may have developed techniques or become experienced with implants that most other surgeons haven’t gotten familiar with.  That’s great for you!  On the other hand, one surgeon may have fallen into the trap of “we’ve always done it this way” and may really be behind the times!  That’s not so good.
 
Here are six reasons your new surgeon may be recommending a different approach to your situation, and the questions you should ask before choosing a course of care.
 
1. They may not be familiar with one approach – not every surgeon is trained in the same techniques and surgical approaches, and some older surgeons simply don’t have the time or energy to go back and re-train in newer procedures they may not use frequently. Ask if your doctor has personal experience with both procedures? If they do, why are they recommending one over the other?
​
2. They may not feel comfortable doing one approach in every case – some surgeons, particularly when a procedure is new to them, will only apply those techniques in the most straight-forward cases.  That’s smart, and good medical practice.  If your case is more complicated, “pushing the envelope” may be risky and something they don’t want to do.

3. They may be very familiar with the approach but not think it’s right for you – on the other hand, a surgeon with more extensive experience with a procedure may be more aware of pit-falls and flaws in the strategy that make a given procedure a poor choice for you.  If that’s the case, they should be able to explain plainly why another approach fits your situation better.

4. They may have had a recent bad experience with the approach – Any surgeon who’s had a poor outcome with an innovative procedure will sit down and reassess that approach from one end to the other.  If the problems were unavoidable and unrelated to the new implant or new approach, fine. If they have any suspicion that the technique wasn’t as good as they thought it was, they may be very hesitant to try it again in another patient.

5. They may have become familiar with the approach, studied the literature, followed their patients, and developed doubts about the long-term results for their patients – if this is the case they may be ahead of the curve in tempering their enthusiasm for a procedure many others are very excited about. They should be able to explain their thoughts clearly and give you some examples of why they are skeptical.

6. They may have perfected a different approach that they are comfortable and confident in, and not want to change their practice – sometimes surgeons have become so quick and proficient with one approach that it just doesn’t make sense for them to fiddle with success.  If they can offer a reliable and successful outcome with their technique, better than what “new technology” is offering, then their tried and true approach may still be the winner in the long run.
Picture of spinal decompression
Whatever the reason for the difference of opinion, your surgeon should be able to give you their thoughts, and take the time to answer your questions, without resorting to tired “that’s the way I’ve always done it” or “ I just don’t believe in it” sorts of excuses.  So, ask good questions, and get good answers, before you make an important decision!
​
Thanks for reading and let me know what other questions you might have!

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10/27/2022

Taking care of your back and neck in the Garden

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What can you do to care for you back and neck when you're out in the garden?

My patients love to garden, and no matter what - back pain, neck pain - nothing's going to keep them out of the garden for long.  But there are things you can do to keep your back and neck in good shape while you do that hard work you love so much!
Thanks for watching!

​Let me know in the comments if there are questions you'd like me to answer about your back or neck problems, or about spine surgery in general. And feel free to share this with others.

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10/22/2022

My Insurance Denied MY BACK SURGERY?!? What does “Pre-Approval” even mean?

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While insurance companies continue to explain that their “process” is simply a means of protecting patients from unnecessary or unproven procedures,

it is clear that the process is becoming so widespread that anyone can end up facing a denial for treatment – delaying care and requiring a formal “appeal” for almost any form of medical care.
​
Different insurers handle the process different ways, but all use it.  Doctors continue to incorporate algorithms into their notes and documentation to cover every possible question your insurer could ask,  but, then, the insurer can always ask something else that has never come up before, or more commonly request written documentation from a third party to support the patient’s own report, in essence saying “Prove it!”.   And this denial of coverage often comes within 24 hours of the scheduled surgical date, making a response difficult, impossible, or fruitless.
Old Master drawing of head and neck of a man in anguish or pain.
The usual outcome is that your doctor will have to have a “peer-to-peer” conversation (argument) with another doctor (often retired, employed by the insurer), to convince them that the surgery is necessary and appropriate. Usually this is successful, but it helps (is absolutely necessary) if your doctor has ALL THE AMMUNITION he/she needs to win that argument.

Patients often assume that, for one reason or another, this won’t affect them.  Here are 5 (OK, 7) ASSUMPTIONS patients commonly make before getting DENIED by their insurance company:
​
  1. That won’t happen to me – I have really good insurance!  Pre-approval is a favorite tool of EVERY good insurance company, and they employ an army of reviewers and administrators to comb your records to see why (not if) they should delay or deny your expensive surgery.  Aetna, Anthem, Medical Mutual, HCA – doesn’t matter, they all do it, and some more aggressively than others. 
  2. They can’t deny me treatment for a serious health problem! – They can and they do.  There was a time when I could document that a patient had spinal cord compression or early signs of paralysis, for instance, and get an approval without delay.  That’s not the case anymore.  In fact, the AMA reports that roughly 90% of doctors surveyed reported seeing patients whose critical treatment was delayed by pre-approval denials, and who suffered significant adverse events due to treatment denials.
  3. I’ve done all the things a patient can do to get better, before seeking surgery – this should be straight-forward… Again, that used to be the case.  But as physicians have gotten better and better at adhering to original guidelines for approval, insurance companies have continued to “move the goal-posts”.  While spine care providers have long recognized the importance of active physical therapy, anti-inflammatories, activity modifications, and pain management as proper treatment before considering many surgeries, these were intended as appropriate ways to get patients better, and not hurdles to prevent surgery.  Now, however, many companies simply insist on these treatments, and want to see them documented, before approving surgical treatment of any kind. 
  4. I had a complete, formal physical therapy program, gave rest, ice, nonsteroidal medications, and chiropractic treatment a reasonable chance to work!  Well, that’s where the Prove it! part of the conflict comes in.  When you get your denial letter, (often days after your surgery was cancelled) it will say that your surgery was cancelled because “your healthcare provider failed to provide adequate documentation” that you had met criteria for approval.  What that means is that, even though your notes document that you have had a “full course of physical therapy” and the appeal letter your doctor wrote documented the dates you had physical therapy, the company wants to see the actual records from your physical therapist!  Did you get those for your doctor? Do you have them at all?  Similarly, while your doctor is considered an expert in interpretation of x-rays and MRI everywhere else, including a court of law, their reading and report of your x-ray findings or your MRI can be dismissed as “inadequate” and the company will often demand the original radiologist reports from where-ever your imaging was done.  Did you bring those with you?  We will need them.
​
John Singer Sargent drawing of back musculature, straining.

5.  My health is at stake – surely they don’t want me to get sicker?  Remember this – your insurer didn’t say you couldn’t have surgery, they said they wouldn’t pay for it.  The AMA suggests that one of the proposed benefits of pre-approval denials – the prevention of unnecessary treatment and costs – often borne by employers, has not been seen, and that an additional cost of prolonged and sometimes permanent disability for their workers has now been documented, and attributed to either delay treatment, or patients’ frustration and decision to abandon effective treatment because of denials.  To that point the AMA survey  found that:
  • 34% of physicians reported that prior authorization has led to a serious adverse event for a patient
  • 24% of physicians reported that prior authorization delay has led to a patient needing hospitalization
  •  18% of physicians reported that prior authorization has led to a life-threatening event or required “un-authorized” intervention to prevent permanent impairment or damage
If you don’t have the surgery, you may not get better, your employer may have to pay for disability or find another employer, but your insurer will get to keep the money they’ve already collected as your premium. And if you get sicker, your doctor can “appeal”, repeat the work that they’ve already done, reschedule your surgery and try again.  That’s not good for you!

6.  Well, as long as I get the surgery done, they’ll have to pay afterwards.  That’s not a reliable assumption even if you get the pre-approval in the first place.  Post-treatment denials are not uncommon and require a another round of appeals if your hospital is going to recoup the expenses of the hospitalization and surgery without turning to you. The denial letter will again refer to “your healthcare providers” either lack of documentation or a mistake in billing, but that mistake can consist of absolutely perfect paperwork being read incorrectly by the insurer – for instance a reviewer not recognizing the difference between arthrodesis (fusion) and arthroplasty (joint replacement).

7.   Well, if my doctor does a good job with the peer-to-peer review this should get settled pretty quickly, right?  Unfortunately, not so.  Roughly a third of the peer-to-peer reviews I engage in start with “So what did you call us for?” When I respond that I was offered a chance to appeal their denial decision I am informed that, no – I was offered a chance to call and discuss it, but that the denial was made based on “a Board decision”. I was informed that the company had decided at the corporate level not to cover that type of treatment and that there was no opportunity to discuss, appeal, or debate the denial.  “Thanks for calling”.  Or as one neurosurgeon/reviewer told me – “your right, there’s no reason to get an MRI for this patient’s compression fracture, but that’s our corporate policy.  She (the patient) must have an MRI and then resubmit the request”. They then refused to approve the MRI!
Spine surgeon at work - concentrating.
So, here’s my advice:
Get your records, keep your records, and copy your records like you were preparing for a tax audit.

Know who provided your care, when and where. Bring copies of your physical therapist or chiropractors treatment notes with you.

Don’t fudge the dates – if you tell me “sure – I’ve had a full course of physical therapy” I’ll believe you, but if it turns out it was three visits two years ago, there’s a real likelihood your surgery will get delayed or flat-out denied.

Don’t cut corners – if your doctor prescribes physical therapy but you just don’t want to go, there’s not much anyone can do if your insurer flags your chart.  If you do go, and it’s just too painful – GET YOUR THERAPIST TO DOCUMENT THAT CLEARLY – and provide that documentation when you come to see your surgeon.

Bring your imaging studies – x-rays and MRI – on a CD so your doctor can read them and plan the best treatment for you, BUT ALSO – bring the Radiologist’s printed reports for those studies so they can be submitted with your treatment application.

This was intended as a brief note, but so many of my patients are being impacted by this process now that it is crucial that you be prepared and understand the process a bit.  It won’t help to get frustrated with your doctor’s clinic staff or schedulers. They often fax 20 – 30 – 40 pages of material to your insurer, 2 or 3 times to make sure everything is in order...only to get a one page fax the day before surgery, without explanation, stating that the surgery is denied for “lack of documentation”.

And, if you end up embroiled in this process, this is one time that writing your senator and congressman wouldn’t be a bad idea, as these issues are being reviewed in congress.  Your story could be important to changing this system!

Thanks for reading, and let me know what other questions you might have!

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    I'm Dr. Rob McLain. I've been taking care of back and neck pain patients for more than 30 years.  I'm a spine surgeon.  But one of my most important jobs is...
    answering questions!

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