New
Service for TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com
readers...roll mouse over, click on
highlighted links in stories to review items
from Amazon
Now, keep up to date
with daily feeds of newly posted stories
about America's Seniors...click on the box
to the left
Active
life begins (again) at 40 after minimally
invasive Spine Surgery replaces two disks
Newswise — A car accident five years ago
destroyed two disks between three bones in
Weber’s spine, bringing her active lifestyle
to a sudden stop.
But minimally invasive spine surgery performed at
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center is giving the
Greeley, Colo., resident a chance to return
to the tennis court and ski slopes without
the pain that made even sitting in a car a
difficult task.
“I couldn’t extend my right leg because I’d have
pain going down it. So I’d have to keep the
steering wheel really close and my leg bent,
and sometimes I couldn’t even drive because
of the pain,” said the 40-year-old mother of
two.
According to Weber, who used to play on a United
States Tennis Association (USTA) league and
is a water aerobics and water therapy
instructor, after the accident, she was
unable to even hug her then 3- and
5-year-old daughters in a normal way. “I’d
have to sit down and then have them sit on
my lap,” she remembers.
After the crash, Weber underwent a surgical
procedure called lumbar laminectomy in which
pieces of damaged disk material were removed
to take pressure off a pinched nerve root
exiting the spinal column. Disks act as firm
cushions between the vertebrae.
Surgical fusion of the area – lumbar vertebrae 3,
4 and 5 – was discussed, but knowing that
this would require a long period of
recuperation and limited mobility, Weber
wanted to wait until technology provided a
less-invasive option for multiple-disk
replacement.
While waiting, Weber sought pain relief and
healing through medical treatment and a
variety of complementary approaches,
including massage therapy, acupuncture,
chiropractic, water therapy, and Bikram
yoga.
If nothing else, she reasoned, she would be in
good physical condition when it was time to
try surgery. Selective nerve root blocks, in
which an anesthetic and a steroid were
injected into the inflamed area, provided
some short-term relief but no long-term
solutions.
Last May, Weber learned of a minimally invasive
operation to replace two or more adjacent
disks. She researched the work of
neurosurgeon Burak Ozgur, M.D., a minimally
invasive spine surgery specialist who is one
of the top surgeons experienced in the
technique.
Weber arranged a Nov. 2 consultation with Ozgur,
who had joined Cedars-Sinai’s Department of
Neurosurgery in October. Surgery was
performed Nov. 14.
Ozgur said the procedure, which was completed in
about three and a half hours, is performed
in two steps.
“First, we approach from the side, exactly 90
degrees from the spine, and access the two
disk spaces. We remove the disks and put in
‘cages’ that contain bone graft materials
and a protein that enhances and speeds up
the fusion process. Then from the back, we
insert screws and rods to stabilize the
spine.”
Using a scope and special instruments, the entire
operation is performed through four
incisions, each measuring about an inch and
a half. These are closed with melt-away
stitches and glue, resulting in very small
scars.
More importantly, the procedure spares the muscle
injury and significant blood loss that is
common with traditional back surgery, along
with the long, painful months of
recuperation.
Weber was discharged from the hospital after
three days and stayed with family in the Los
Angeles area. Her mother returned with her
to Greeley on Nov. 23, staying about three
weeks for support.
“I cannot believe how good I felt right
afterward. I went Christmas shopping. My mom
had to make me slow down,” said Weber,
noting that without constant pain she has
more energy and feels “full of life.”
Although she has to pace herself for a while, she
expects to gradually resume her normal
routine.
“I think this procedure is revolutionizing spinal
fusions because it’s changing how people are
recovering,” Ozgur said.
“Compared to invasive surgery, the end result
looks the same as far as the construct, but
the recovery is much improved. And it can be
an option for other indications, such as
adult degenerative scoliosis, which is
usually more complicated and involving more
levels. I’ve done five- and six-level cases
with this type of approach.”
The first in Southern California and one of only
10 hospitals in the state whose nurses have
been honored with the prestigious Magnet
designation, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center is
one of the largest nonprofit academic
medical centers in the Western United
States.
For 19 consecutive years, it has been named Los
Angeles’ most preferred hospital for all
health needs in an independent survey of
area residents. Cedars-Sinai is
internationally renowned for its diagnostic
and treatment capabilities as well as
breakthroughs in biomedical research and
superlative medical education.
It ranks among the top 10 non-university
hospitals in the nation for its research
activities and is fully accredited by the
Association for the Accreditation of Human
Research Protection Programs, Inc. (AAHRPP).
Additional information is available at http://www.cedars-sinai.edu.