replacing spinal discs

Research into replacing spinal discs has been underway for a while, but it appears as though it is working. They haven’t really gotten as far as neck discs, but more work is underway. Oooh… Maybe one day i’ll be able to ski and play frisbee. Oooh….


Artificial discs for bad backs inch closer to U.S. use
Tuesday, May 20, 2003 Posted: 10:47 AM EDT (1447 GMT)

WASHINGTON (AP) — Russ Rice’s back pain was so intense he could hardly walk. Two surgeries had failed to offer lasting help for his damaged spinal disc, and only large doses of painkillers got him through each day.

Then, as part of a study, doctors implanted an artificial disc in Rice’s back. Just four days later, the California man returned to work, pain-free for the first time in over a year.

Artificial discs have long been used in Europe but remain experimental in this country. Two major studies nearing completion could change that: For the first time, scientists will know just how such implants compare to the only other alternative patients like Rice have had — major surgery to fuse together two vertebrae in the lower back.

Preliminary results are promising enough that doctors expect one artificial back disc to be on the U.S. market as early as next year.

Researchers aren’t stopping there: Studies recently began of artificial discs designed for the more delicate neck, which don’t bear as heavy a load but must be more moveable. And scientists hope to begin studies within a year of injections of collagen-like material to prop up a collapsing disc, buying time before more surgery is needed.

The bones of the spine have spongy discs between them — tough collagen rings surrounding a fluid-filled cushion — that act as shock absorbers, keeping verterbrae properly separated, cushioned and flexible.

But a disc damaged from injury or aging can cause intense pain, especially if nearby nerves are crunched or the disc degenerates enough that bone grinds on bone.

Spinal fusion
Back pain affects millions of Americans, and a degenerating disc is one of the main reasons. Time to heal and painkillers help most recover; some need special exercises.

But a small percentage need surgery, called a microdiscectomy, to remove damaged pieces.

When even that doesn’t help, more than 200,000 Americans a year undergo spinal fusion — completely removing the degenerated disc and grafting the bones on either side together. It eases pain, but causes a problem: Freezing proper spinal motion puts more pressure on other discs below that spot. As many as 20 percent of fusion recipients need surgery for another disc problem in the next 10 years, says Dr. John Regan of Los Angeles’ Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.

The hope is that an artificial disc, by allowing more movement, won’t have that problem.

The earliest artificial discs failed miserably, says Dr. David Bradford of the University of the University of California, San Francisco. They could become dangerously loose in the spine.

Then in the late 1980s, European scientists developed different materials that stayed in place until they grew into the bone — and tracking of European patients suggests those discs offer significant pain relief with few side effects.

Under study
Two European models — the SB Charite and Prodisc — are the furthest in U.S. studies that, unlike the European research, directly compare the implants to spinal fusion to prove whether the artificial disc is as effective and safe as standard treatment.

Results of the Charite study — comparing how 300 patients fared two years after surgery — are due in December, and the Food and Drug Administration is expected to evaluate that disc next year, Regan says.

Prodisc is still under study at about a dozen U.S. hospitals.

The discs are similar — metal plates pressed into the surrounding vertebrae that hold in place a soft plastic cushion. Preliminary results from both are promising, say Regan, who is studying the Charite disc, and Prodisc investigator Bradford.

Another company, Medtronic Sofamor Danek, recently began U.S. studies of its own artificial disc.

However those studies turn out, doctors already know recovery from disc implantation is faster: Implant recipients are encouraged to start moving around the same day, while fusion patients are put in a back brace for three months while their bones meld.

“I’m only 40, so I didn’t want a fusion — really, you’re never the same after that,” said Rice, a Santa Clarita, California, business executive who was dreading a plane trip abroad to get an artificial disc when he learned Regan had an opening.

He needed a midday nap for about a week after returning to work, but otherwise rapidly recovered. “Every day I wake up and I just thank the Lord because I’m like a new guy,” he says.

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9 thoughts on “replacing spinal discs

  1. ryan

    wow. i asked about this a few years ago when it was my turn, but they made it sound like it would be never, for options preserving flexibility. they also say “you won’t notice the flexibility loss” of fusion. i notice. (i don’t let the missing discs from c6 to t1 bother me, but the changes have made me into a person with much better posture, to avoid pain.)

  2. zephoria

    Yeah – there’s nothing that will convince me to go into surgery for fusion right now because i don’t trust the “experts”… no one could give me a straight face about why i should get fusion done so i refused and i’m sooo glad that i did.

  3. Bill Wilmer

    I had the ProDisc device implanted in June and immediately felt the difference. I would not opt for fusion at 40yrs old. I can’t say I really have heard of a good fusion experience.

  4. Bill Wilmer

    I had the ProDisc device implanted in June and immediately felt the difference. I would not opt for fusion at 40yrs old. I can’t say I really have heard of a good fusion experience.

  5. Danielle

    Cool! This sounds like it’s going to become available much sooner than my doctors made it seem. I’m only 26 so I don’t want fusion, especially since it would mean my lowest 2 lumbar discs being fused with my sacrum. I damaged 2 discs in a car accident about 10 years ago. I think I can hold out a little longer 🙂

  6. Kevin

    I hear all the pros of the possibilities of this surgery however please note that my sister underwent this sugery on the 7th of October 2003. The procedure involves entering through the front instead of directly over the spine in the back. She has been in the hospital with complications. Specifically it is because of how it virtually shuts down the digestive system. After two weeks she was finally discharged but to no avail, On the 30th of Oct. she was re-admitted to the hospital in critical condition. So remember, “Buyer Beware” I myself have had two spinal surgeries involving bone grafting/fusion with metal instumentation. The last surgery was in July of 1995 and I was in high hopes of this newer technique because I myself,now post surgery of almost 8 years is starting to re-experience a lot of the same problems that existed in the past. SO I am hoping that I would be a cadidate for some newer type surgery that would fix what is wrong instead of just offering a temporary fix. Keep your eyes and ears open, we are on the threshold of new and fascinating medical break-throughs. Please take yor time when considering your options, the outcome is what you will have to live with. Keeping my chin up!!, Kevin

  7. Norm Cain

    I am researching this procedure for myself. I have been advised that a fusion is my only option. I DON’T THINK SO. I have read many pages of feed back on the prodisc and I am currently trying to get into a program using this technology. If anyone has any suggestions, feel free to contact me. norm@clickstopmall.com

  8. theresa

    my husband has degenerative disc desease and a lot of pain in his lower back. his doctor is saying the only way to get rid of the pain is to fuse the spine. is the disc replacement anything that might be available in the near future?

  9. victor carr

    At the age of 65 with degenerative disc disease,and three back surgeries,95,96 and 2000,I find myself contemplating a fourth.I survive on percocet10/325mgs four to five times a day.I am thinking of changing to Fetnayl. this drug also called duragesic,is delivered through a patch ,is effective, but very expensive. I’ve heard of a DR.Charles Theosilos in Palm Beach FL. who uses the bones of body to form a matrix material which is then cemented in the vetebrae . This procedure is in lieu of metal. If there is any one out who has gone through this procedure ,please elaborate.3-24-04 victor

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