My Lumbar or Cervical Surgery Failed

Question: How can a decision of “failure” be made more reliably?

Answer: “Failure” should not be used as a label by itself; first, a systematic evaluation should be performed:

  1. Was the diagnosis correct? (Consistency between examination and imaging)
  2. Was the treatment goal clear? (Pain, strength loss, walking ability?)
  3. Were rehabilitation and follow-up completed?
  4. Did a new problem develop? (recurrence, adjacent segment disease, infection, etc.)
  5. Is new imaging required? (if needed, contrast MRI, dynamic X-rays, EMG, etc.)

Three practical suggestions when seeking a second opinion

  1. Bring all tests (MRI/CT/EMG) and surgical notes/discharge summaries.
  2. Write your questions: “What is the problem? What are the options? What is the risk–benefit balance?”
  3. The goal is not to compare physicians, but to clarify the situation.