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Eval for esi?
so his only symptoms prior to surgery were some stiffness? dangHe had C3-6 lami/fusion already. Referred for left arm pain. No one seemingly able to differentiate neck pain from a painful cuff tear.
Can you share the T1 and/or FS/STIR sequences for the above slices if you have them?
While I agree it looks like lipomatosis and nerve root crowding, I'm confused by the thickened appearing ventral dura vs PLL.
Just as a follow-up on this case: colleague of mind saw her in rehab yesterday and apparently she's doing quite well, all things considered! She is going to have to do some radiation but is getting some strength back.72F diabetic (A1c 7ish), BMI 48, quite poor baseline functional status, uses wheelchair but does ambulate short distances around the house. She was having radicular pain so did a rather difficult ILESI at L5-S1 10 days ago. She reported she was feeling better but then yesterday began having sudden onset weakness in both legs, peripheral edema, and worsening incontinence. I refer her to the ED and overnight she got scanned.
Hasn't been read yet. Malignancy vs osteomyelitis vs fracture?
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Gnarly. I don’t think anyone around me would operate on him unless he was floridly myelopathic, like losing function of his limbs.Given a motorized scooter for disequilibrium and weakness. Never had a cervical MRI. DTR 3+. Gait dysfxn blamed on a reaction to cipro. He is 330 pounds at 5’10” and smokes 2 PPD.
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Sounds like he isGnarly. I don’t think anyone around me would operate on him unless he was floridly myelopathic, like losing function of his limbs.
Yeah. A lot of surgeons I know would still probably find a reason to not do itSounds like he is
GO DAWGSHe smells terrible. Very unhealthy guy.
Isn't more like mid back pain?
1: I have no idea WTF I'm looking at.81 year old male with a right L5 radiculopathy 2/2 neuroforaminal/lateral recess stenosis.
I performed 2 epidurals, one transforaminal and one interlaminar - both provided relief but short lived.
Elected to perform an endoscopic transforaminal decompression - specifically a foraminotomy and discectomy. POD #1 with complete resolution of radic. Here are a few pics -
Pic #1 - Exiting L5 nerve is to the right off screen, at 12 oclock we have the SAP and at 9 oclock we have the start of the pedicle. Straight ahead is the disc herniation.
Pic #2 - Started decompression - now able to pass a probe into the epidural space
Pic #3 - Almost the end of the decompression, you can see the large defect in the disc space - there was also an ostophyte that i shaved down at the 9 oclock position.
1: I have no idea WTF I'm looking at.
2: Where / how exactly are you learning to do this?
What books or sources do you recommend?
Ive also been interested but short of a fellowship wasnt sure how to get experience. How did you explain the the patients the first few cases you did and how do you disclose they may be the first one youve done? What do you say when you abort? How long does the typical case take are you doing endoscopic laminectomies?Atlas of Full-Endoscopic Spine Surgery: 9781684200238: Medicine & Health Science Books @ Amazon.com
Atlas of Full-Endoscopic Spine Surgery: 9781684200238: Medicine & Health Science Books @ Amazon.comwww.amazon.com
This is a great start - I also recommend watching RIWO spine videos on youtube - german surgeons that do this stuff - I've reviewed the videos multiple times - they talk all about the approach, targeting, go through trouble shooting etc.
Ive also been interested but short of a fellowship wasnt sure how to get experience. How did you explain the the patients the first few cases you did and how do you disclose they may be the first one youve done? What do you say when you abort? How long does the typical case take are you doing endoscopic laminectomies?
What about the equipment and the facility?
Is some ASC going to buy this stuff on a whim? If they already have it getting the privileges seems difficult…”yeah I want to start doing this but we need to have YouTube playing on the TV in the OR.”
You’re in a unique spot man. Kudos.
Bad assHeres the other case I did that day - LSS with NC - not a MILD candidate as she had significant facet overgrowth. I performed a left sided interlaminar endoscopic decompression of the posterior elements. This required using a high speed diamond drill to shave down the caudal portion of the cranial lamina as well as the medial portion of the facet and removal of ligamentum flavum. Here is a pic of the case I marked up -
Pretty dope!Heres the other case I did that day - LSS with NC - not a MILD candidate as she had significant facet overgrowth. I performed a left sided interlaminar endoscopic decompression of the posterior elements. This required using a high speed diamond drill to shave down the caudal portion of the cranial lamina as well as the medial portion of the facet and removal of ligamentum flavum. Here is a pic of the case I marked up -
Pretty dope!
Have you ever had a Dural tear? Has there ever been a time you had to convert to an open procedure?
How wide of a laminectomy can you get with this approach? Also do you have any pre and post-op MRIs to see degree of on a decompression?
Sorry didn't mean to come across that way. I wasn't being facetious. I'm actually very interested in this. I want to learn it but always thought about how to handle these situations. It makes a lot more sense and feasibility if you have a surgeon available for assistance. I'm actually seeing a lot more of these endoscopic cases on LinkedIn. A lot of the surgeons are also starting to lean towards endoscopy. How many cases do you think someone would need to become proficient?Can't tell if your being facetious haha but no I don't open.
Knock on wood no dural tears - however if you do have one small ones do not need to be repaired and larger ones you can use fibrin grafts u can pop down the scope. If there is extruded nerve rootlets then yeah - has to be opened and I do have neurosurgical colleagues I can call.
You can get a pretty wide laminectomy if needed - and take out bone en block but most of the time for cases I would do (I wouldn't do multilevel) you just need to take off enough lamina to get all the ligament out - kind of like MILD. You can def do more bony work with lateral recess stenosis - as long as you preserve like 50% facet joint you should not cause instability. I have used this technique for lateral recess stenosis with good results.
its cool that you do this but for me it gets too close to being a spine surgeon.
this may be the future of pain management, if it is not stuffed out by spine surgery.
in a way, it seems more apropos than dead baby dust...
Sorry didn't mean to come across that way. I wasn't being facetious. I'm actually very interested in this. I want to learn it but always thought about how to handle these situations. It makes a lot more sense and feasibility if you have a surgeon available for assistance. I'm actually seeing a lot more of these endoscopic cases on LinkedIn. A lot of the surgeons are also starting to lean towards endoscopy. How many cases do you think someone would need to become proficient?
100% - but I guess not everything in life is about money- although a lot is - when ur making > 800K doing pain just on ur W2 is way different than when your grinding just to make 400. First world problems I know but F it.I used to do these procedures. The problem is OR time, turnover, upfront cost, and low reimbursement. Your time is better spent elsewhere given the risk reward at this time. Which is sad because they are good procedures.
i had this exact case a couple months ago. surgeon tried a non-instrumented fusion with wha tthe patient called "stem cells". i suspect it was BMAC. surgery failed, new and increased spondy, more pain, instability on flex/ext with pseudoarthrosis. needs to get hardware with anterior approach and is scheduled next week.View attachment 405607
Stenosis symptoms, back and leg.
Failed ESI 3 ways and MBB.
Surgeon refuses as osteoporosis and 83 yrs old.
Next step?
View attachment 405607
Stenosis symptoms, back and leg.
Failed ESI 3 ways and MBB.
Surgeon refuses as osteoporosis and 83 yrs old.
Next step?
Prolia. Tirzepatide. PT.View attachment 405607
Stenosis symptoms, back and leg.
Failed ESI 3 ways and MBB.
Surgeon refuses as osteoporosis and 83 yrs old.
Next step?
As Steve says, own the bone then turf to surgery when no longer osteoporotic 😉Prolia. Tirzepatide. PT.
Open to suggestions.Ok. So you had already decided to do nothing.