Cervical Disc Replacement
Cervical disc replacement is neck surgery that may relieve nerve or spinal cord pressure while preserving motion at the treated level.

Cervical posterior fusion is a neck surgery performed from the back of the neck to stabilize part of the cervical spine. The cervical spine is the part of the spine in the neck. “Posterior” means from the back, and “fusion” means joining two or more vertebrae so they can heal together as one stable segment.
This procedure is also commonly called posterior cervical fusion. It may be performed by itself to stabilize the spine, or it may be performed with decompression procedures such as cervical laminectomy or foraminotomy when the spinal cord or nerve roots also need more space.
Cervical posterior fusion is not the right treatment for every patient with neck pain. De Novo Brain & Spine evaluates adult patients in Stockbridge, Fayetteville, Atlanta, and surrounding communities to help determine whether cervical posterior fusion, another surgical option, or non-surgical care may be appropriate.
Cervical posterior fusion may be considered when the cervical spine needs stabilization from the back of the neck. It may also be part of treatment when decompression alone could leave the spine unstable or when several levels are involved.
Conditions that may lead to consideration of cervical posterior fusion include:
Cervical posterior fusion does not treat every cause of neck pain, arm pain, numbness, or weakness. The treatment decision depends on the cause of symptoms, the location of compression, spinal alignment, stability, and the patient’s overall health.
Cervical posterior fusion may be considered when the bones, joints, ligaments, or alignment of the cervical spine are not stable enough to safely support the neck. It may also be considered when decompression of the spinal cord or nerve roots requires removal of bone or tissue that could affect stability.
In patients with cervical myelopathy, symptoms may include balance problems, trouble walking, hand clumsiness, weakness, numbness, tingling, stiffness, or changes in coordination. In patients with nerve root compression, symptoms may include pain, numbness, tingling, or weakness traveling into the shoulder, arm, or hand.
Some patients may need cervical posterior fusion because the problem involves several levels from the back of the neck. Others may need it because the spine is unstable, alignment is abnormal, or a previous surgery did not provide enough long-term support.
The decision is individualized. Cervical posterior fusion may be discussed sooner when there is spinal cord compression, progressive neurologic change, fracture, deformity, or instability.
Doctors determine whether cervical posterior fusion may be appropriate by comparing the patient’s symptoms, neurologic examination, imaging findings, spinal alignment, stability, prior treatment history, and surgical risks.
Evaluation may include:
Spinal alignment is especially important. A posterior approach may be appropriate for some patterns of compression or instability, while an anterior approach or combined approach may be better for others.
Cervical posterior fusion is usually performed through an incision on the back of the neck. The surgeon exposes the affected levels of the cervical spine and places instrumentation, such as screws and rods, to hold the bones in a stable position.
Bone graft material is placed along the prepared bone surfaces to help the vertebrae heal together over time. The goal is for the treated levels to become one stable segment.
If the spinal cord or nerve roots are compressed, the fusion may be combined with decompression. This may include cervical laminectomy, foraminotomy, or removal of tissue causing pressure. The exact surgical plan depends on the diagnosis, anatomy, number of levels involved, alignment, instability, and surgeon judgment.
The main goals of cervical posterior fusion are to stabilize the cervical spine, support spinal alignment, and protect the spinal cord or nerve roots when instability or decompression requires structural support.
Potential benefits may include improved stability, support after decompression, reduced abnormal motion, and relief of symptoms related to the treated structural problem. In cases of spinal cord compression, surgery may help prevent further neurologic decline, although improvement is not guaranteed.
Cervical posterior fusion has important limitations. It does not treat every cause of neck pain. It does not reverse all nerve or spinal cord injury. It reduces motion at the fused levels. Some patients may continue to have pain, stiffness, numbness, weakness, balance problems, or other symptoms after surgery.
General risks may include infection, bleeding, nerve injury, spinal cord injury, spinal fluid leak, persistent symptoms, hardware-related problems, failure of fusion, adjacent-level problems, alignment changes, or need for additional surgery. Fusion healing can be affected by smoking or nicotine use, diabetes, osteoporosis, poor nutrition, infection, and other medical factors.
Treatment planning is individualized. Cervical posterior fusion is one option among several possible treatments for cervical spine disease.
Non-surgical options may include observation, medication, physical therapy, activity modification, bracing in selected cases, and injections when appropriate. These options may be reasonable when symptoms are stable and there is no urgent spinal cord compression, progressive neurologic deficit, fracture, or severe instability.
Other surgical options may include anterior cervical discectomy and fusion, cervical disc replacement, cervical laminectomy without fusion, cervical laminoplasty, posterior cervical foraminotomy, cervical corpectomy, or combined anterior and posterior surgery. These procedures are not interchangeable.
The best option depends on the location of compression, number of levels involved, spinal alignment, instability, bone quality, prior surgery, neurologic findings, medical risks, and treatment goals.
Recovery after cervical posterior fusion varies from person to person. It depends on the reason for surgery, the number of levels treated, whether decompression is performed, the patient’s neurologic status before surgery, bone quality, and overall health.
Follow-up usually focuses on incision healing, pain control, neurologic function, walking and balance, activity progression, medication use, and imaging to monitor alignment, hardware position, and fusion healing.
Some patients may need physical therapy, rehabilitation guidance, or activity restrictions during recovery. Fusion healing takes time, and patients should follow the surgeon’s instructions about lifting, bending, twisting, collar use if prescribed, nicotine avoidance, medication use, and follow-up imaging.
Seek emergency medical care or call 911 for sudden or worsening weakness, difficulty walking, loss of balance, loss of bowel or bladder control, or rapidly worsening numbness.
Urgent evaluation is also important for severe neck pain after trauma, fever with severe neck pain, new hand clumsiness, worsening coordination, or symptoms that suggest spinal cord compression.
Patients with persistent neck pain, arm pain, numbness, tingling, weakness, balance difficulty, or hand coordination problems should seek medical evaluation, especially when symptoms interfere with daily function or continue despite conservative care.
Cervical posterior fusion may be used to stabilize the neck when there is spinal instability, abnormal alignment, fracture, deformity, or multilevel disease. It may also be performed with decompression when the spinal cord or nerve roots need more space.
No. Cervical laminectomy removes part of the bony arch to create more space for the spinal cord or nerves. Cervical posterior fusion stabilizes the spine with bone graft and instrumentation. In some patients, both procedures are performed together.
Yes. The fused levels are intended to heal together as one stable segment, so motion is reduced at those levels. The amount of motion change depends on how many levels are fused and the patient’s overall neck condition.
Doctors look at symptoms, neurologic examination findings, MRI, X-rays, CT scans, spinal alignment, instability, number of levels involved, prior surgery, bone quality, and overall health. Fusion may be needed when decompression alone would not provide enough support.
Seek urgent medical care for new or worsening weakness, trouble walking, loss of balance, loss of bowel or bladder control, severe neck pain after trauma, or rapidly worsening numbness. These symptoms may suggest spinal cord or nerve involvement.

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Cervical disc replacement is neck surgery that may relieve nerve or spinal cord pressure while preserving motion at the treated level.
Corpectomy is spine surgery that removes part or all of a vertebral body to decompress and reconstruct selected spinal conditions.
Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) is neck surgery that may relieve cervical nerve or spinal cord pressure in selected patients.