Surgery Overview
Percutaneous means "through the skin" or using a very small incision. Discectomy is the surgical removal of herniated disc material that presses on a nerve root or the spinal cord.
Percutaneous discectomy is different from conventional open discectomy or microdiscectomy. There are several percutaneous procedures. All of them involve inserting small instruments between the vertebrae and into the middle of the disc. X-ray monitoring is used during surgery to guide the movement of the surgical instruments. The surgeon can remove disc tissue by cutting it out, sucking out the center of the disc, or by using lasers to burn or evaporate the disc. The disc material that has herniated is not directly removed in these operations.
This procedure is usually done in a surgery center using either
local or general anesthesia.
Before surgery, your doctor will confirm that a
herniated disc is causing your symptoms by using an
imaging study, such as
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or
computed tomography (CT scan).
What To Expect After Surgery
You can expect to go home on the same day you have a routine percutaneous
discectomy.
After a percutaneous discectomy, you can use prescription
medicine to control pain during the recovery period.
For several weeks, avoid long periods of sitting, as well as bending, twisting, and
lifting.
Why It Is Done
Percutaneous discectomy may be done if:
- The history, physical examination, and imaging
(such as CT scan or MRI) indicate that the disc is bulging, and the material
inside the disc (nucleus) has not ruptured into the spinal
canal.
- Pain and nerve damage have not improved after 4 or more
weeks of nonsurgical treatment, and symptoms are severe and
disabling.
- There are signs of serious nerve damage (that may be
getting worse) in the leg, such as severe weakness, loss of coordination, or
loss of feeling.
- Pain is severe and disabling.
- You are
not able or willing to have a conventional open discectomy
or microdiscectomy.
Should I have surgery for a herniated disc?
This procedure should not be done if you
have:
- Fragments of disc material (nucleus) in the
spinal canal (as seen on CT scan or MRI).
- Narrowing of the spinal
canal (spinal stenosis).
How Well It Works
Percutaneous discectomy is less effective than traditional open
discectomy surgery.1
Risks
During a percutaneous discectomy, the surgeon has no way of seeing
the herniated disc or the compressed nerve root. And the surgery does not directly remove the disc herniation. Therefore, there is
no guarantee that pressure on the nerve will be reduced or eliminated using
percutaneous discectomy.
What To Think About
Many experts consider percutaneous discectomy to be a poor
alternative to standard discectomy or microdiscectomy procedures.
Complete the
surgery information form (PDF)
(What is a PDF document?)
to help you prepare for this surgery.