In spite of the 'shock and awe' that this technique has inspired here it's not new, it's been published, and it's still used in spine circles. A lot of you guys have an overly simplistic conception of spine surgery: it's fused so it's done. That's not reality, technical failures occur. If you place a perc stim and initially the patient gets good coverage but then complains of a change in coverage and rib stim, is that a 'failed stim"? No it's a technical failure. In a similar vein, technical failures - pseudarthrosis, subsidence, hardware failures, adjacent segments, etc - also occur in spine surgery. Work with surgeons and you will see it. Revisions happen appropriately on occasion.
Summarizing your concerns:
1. It's dangerous: yes, everything we do is dangerous. But in the context of CTFESIs, C1/2 Arthrograms, Cervical Stim, etc. This just doesn't pan out. If you encounter a cage you can't get through. Your needle doesn't wedge in the cage and break and the patient doesnt exsanguinate or go into V-Fib. Same iatrogenic risks as discography.
2. It's too difficult. No to that as well. Try it on an ALIF and you will bounce off the cage or get only as far as the annulus. Try it on a PLF and it's pretty much just like a regular discogram. TLIFS & PLIFS lie somewhere in between depending upon the size, position, and # of cages. In my experience you don't need to consider this for an ALIF.
3. It's not reliable. Can't argue this as it's inherent in discography in general. You won't know what the patient will report until you start pressurizing. The biggest concern here is an unrecognized annulogram leading to a false positive. I've had an annulogram with an ALIF but I recognized it and reported it as such. The disc 2 levels up - L3/4 - produced concordant pain in that patient but we opted to try facets, stim, etc instead of a 'skip' fusion.