Lumbar (Low Back) Surgical Implants
1. Those placed within the interbody space (the "disc space")
2. Those
placed onto the spine to provide stabilization
Decompression involves surgically removing tissues pushing or pinching a nerve. Spinal stabilization involves fusing 2 or more vertebrae together. Devices (such as cages, screws, rods) combined with bone graft stop all movement between vertebral bodies.
Interbody Implants (Cages)
The purpose of lumbar interbody implants is to:
1. Maintain disc height between vertebrae to help prevent nerve compression
2. Restore and preserve the lumbar spine's natural alignment
3. Promote spinal fusion
4. Stand alone to provide structural stability
5. Carrier (holder) for fusion material (such as bone graft)
Role of Bone Graft
Whatever implants the surgeon chooses, the final stability of the spine eventually
results from fusion - and fusion is enhanced by bone graft. Autograft is the
patient's bone and allograft is donor bone. A genetically engineered protein,
recombinant human bone morphogenetic protein (rhBMP-2), stimulates the
body to produce natural bone rapidly.
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