Tuesday, 4 March 2014

SPINAL FUSION

Spinal fusion is surgery to permanently join together two or more bones in the spine so there is no movement between them. These bones are called vertebrae.

ABOUT SPINAL FUSION:
-You will be asleep and feel no pain (general anesthesia).The doctor will make a surgical cut (incision) to view the spine. This may be done:

-On your back or neck over the spine. You will be lying face down. Muscles and tissue will be separated to expose the spine.
On one side of your belly, if you are having surgery on your lower back. The surgeon will use tools called retractors to gently separate, hold the soft tissues and blood vessels apart, and have room to work.

-With a cut on the front of the neck, toward the side.
Other surgery, such as a diskectomy, laminectomy, or a foraminotomy, is almost always done first.

-The surgeon will use a graft (such as bone) to hold (or fuse) the bones together permanently. There are several ways of fusing vertebrae together:

-Strips of bone graft material may be placed over the back part of the spine.

-Bone graft material may be placed between the vertebrae.
Special cages may be placed between the vertebrae. These cages are packed with bone graft material.
The surgeon may get the graft from different places:

-From another part of your body (usually around your pelvic bone). This is called an autograft. Your surgeon will make a small cut over your hip and remove some bone from the back of the rim of the pelvis.

-From a bone bank. This is called an allograft.

-A synthetic bone substitute can also be used.
The vertebrae may also fixed together with rods, screws, plates, or cages. They are used to keep the vertebrae from moving until the bone grafts are fully healed.

-Surgery can take 3 to 4 hours.

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