Lumbar Disc Herniation Surgeries
The type and timing of surgery are determined according to the patient’s symptoms, neurological findings, and imaging results. The information below is general.
Question: What types of surgery exist for lumbar disc herniation?
Answer: Surgical options are generally evaluated along a spectrum from minimally invasive methods to open surgery options:
- Minimally invasive methods
- Endoscopic discectomy
- Nucleoplasty / annuloplasty / hydrodiskectomy
- May be performed under local anesthesia or sedation in selected patients
- There are series reporting complication rates of approximately 1–5% with proper patient selection
- Open surgical methods
- Microdiscectomy (microsurgery): Performed under general anesthesia with a small incision
- Instrumented fusion: Considered when instability is present. Long-term adjacent segment problems are reported at approximately 10–30%
- Motion-preserving surgery (prosthesis)
- Performed with implants that partially allow spinal motion
- Aims to reduce adjacent segment loading in selected patients
“Choosing the right surgery for the right patient is a stepwise and individualized solution in the treatment of lumbar disc herniation.”
How is the type of surgery selected?
- Clinical findings (leg pain, strength loss)
- MRI and, if necessary, dynamic X-rays
- Presence of instability
- Response to previously attempted conservative treatments
