The AxiaLIF spine surgery is a less invasive and cheaper alternative to current techniques
With age and injury, degenerative disc disease can ensue. Due to the lack of padding, vertebrae slip and rub together. This leads to excruciating and disabling pain, and may cause sciatica due to pressure on the sciatic nerve, which can lead to cramping, pain and numbness along the lower back and back of the thigh.
Dr Roger Härtl, director of the spine programme at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, is using a new and less-invasive procedure, developed by TranS1 Inc, to help patients recover faster and with a better quality of life. The procedure, called AxiaLIF, involves only a single small incision near the tailbone.
“AxiaLIF offers another option for minimally invasive procedures for spine surgery and opens up avenues to give surgeons a new way to perform a procedure in a less invasive fashion,” says Dr Härtl.
To correct degenerative disc disease, spine surgeons fuse together two or more vertebrae and replace the worn disc with synthetic replacement material. However, the invasive nature of this surgery often leads to a long and painful recovery for the patient.
Using AxiaLIF, patients are usually released from the hospital within 24 hours following the surgery, and are able to return to their daily routines and work within two or three weeks.
The surgery only takes between 45 and 60 minutes with minimal blood loss, compared to the traditional four-hour procedure. And because there is only a small incision, there is less pain for the patient, because the area has fewer pain receptors.
More traditional surgeries call for large incisions in the back or abdomen. These invasive techniques often require complicated dissection of muscles, nerves and even organs, so the surgeon can navigate to the affected area. Additional vascular surgeons are called in to perform this part of the procedure, which can take hours, even before a spine surgeon begins. Because of these invasive measures, patients are at a much higher risk for greater blood loss, and nerve and muscle injury, which means more time in recovery with physical therapists to get back to doing everyday activities.
To perform the surgery, a one-inch incision is made at the tailbone. Under x-ray guidance, Dr Härtl locates and removes the damaged portion of the disc – most often affected is the lumbar region, between the sacral (S1) and lumbar (L5) vertebrae – and then injects synthetic material to rebuild the disc. A screw is then inserted to distract and stabilise the vertebrae, and finally, the incision is closed. The AxiaLIF procedure is estimated to be less costly than open surgeries. The main savings are in the dramatic decrease in operating-room time, length of stay, less need for post-surgical pain medication and more rapid rehabilitation.
“With this new surgery, spine surgeons can offer patients more options,” says Dr Härtl. “We used to have only one or two surgeries to choose from, but now we have a variety of techniques to tailor the treatment for each person.”