Anterior Cervical Discectomy And Fusion (ACDF)
Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) is neck surgery that may relieve cervical nerve or spinal cord pressure in selected patients.
Lateral interbody fusion is a type of lumbar spine fusion surgery that reaches the disc space from the side of the body. “Lateral” means from the side. “Interbody fusion” means the disc space between two vertebrae is treated so the bones can heal together as one stable segment.
This procedure is also called lateral lumbar interbody fusion, or LLIF. Related terms may include XLIF, DLIF, direct lateral interbody fusion, extreme lateral interbody fusion, and oblique lateral interbody fusion, depending on the exact approach and system used.
During lateral interbody fusion, the damaged disc is removed and a spacer, cage, or bone graft material is placed into the disc space. This may help restore disc height, support alignment, and create the conditions for fusion. De Novo Brain & Spine evaluates adult patients in Stockbridge, Fayetteville, Atlanta, and surrounding communities to help determine whether lateral interbody fusion, another surgical option, or non-surgical care may be appropriate.
Lateral interbody fusion is not used for every patient with low back pain or every patient with degenerative changes on imaging. It may be considered when the problem involves the lumbar disc space, spinal alignment, instability, or selected forms of nerve compression related to disc collapse.
Conditions that may lead to consideration of lateral interbody fusion include:
Lateral interbody fusion does not directly remove every source of nerve compression. In some patients, direct decompression from the back of the spine may also be needed.
Lateral interbody fusion may be considered when a lumbar disc has collapsed, spinal alignment has changed, or a spinal level is unstable. These structural problems may contribute to low back pain, leg pain, numbness, tingling, weakness, or difficulty standing and walking.
In many non-urgent cases, patients first try non-surgical care. This may include activity modification, medication, physical therapy, home exercise, weight management when appropriate, and image-guided injections. Surgery may be discussed when symptoms continue, worsen, or return despite appropriate treatment.
Lateral interbody fusion may be considered when restoring disc height could help open the nerve passageways, especially when foraminal stenosis is related to disc space collapse. It may also be used as part of a larger alignment or deformity correction plan.
This approach is not appropriate for every lumbar level. For example, the L5-S1 level is often difficult to reach from a lateral approach because of the pelvis and nearby anatomy. The decision depends on the patient’s anatomy, imaging, symptoms, spinal stability, and surgical goals.
Doctors determine whether lateral interbody fusion may be appropriate by comparing the patient’s symptoms, neurologic examination, imaging findings, prior treatments, medical history, and surgical risks.
Evaluation may include:
Because lateral interbody fusion works near the psoas muscle and lumbar nerve plexus in some approaches, surgeons also consider nerve anatomy, approach-side risks, hip flexor symptoms, thigh symptoms, and whether neuromonitoring or another approach may be needed.
Lateral interbody fusion is usually performed with the patient positioned on the side. The surgeon reaches the lumbar spine through an incision on the side of the body, passing through or around muscles and tissues to reach the disc space.
The damaged disc material is removed from the side. A spacer, cage, or bone graft material is then placed into the disc space to help restore height and support fusion between the vertebrae.
Some patients also need screws, rods, or other posterior instrumentation to stabilize the spine while fusion healing occurs. This may be done during the same operation or as part of a staged surgical plan. The exact approach depends on the spinal level, diagnosis, alignment, instability, bone quality, prior surgery, and surgeon judgment.
The main goals of lateral interbody fusion are to stabilize a painful or unstable lumbar spinal level, restore disc space height when appropriate, support spinal alignment, and create the conditions for fusion.
Potential benefits may include improved mechanical stability, improved alignment, and more space for selected nerve roots when disc collapse is contributing to foraminal narrowing. Improvement is not guaranteed, and symptom recovery can vary.
Lateral interbody fusion has important limitations. It does not treat every cause of low back pain. It does not directly remove all types of spinal stenosis. It does not reverse all nerve injury. It reduces motion at the fused level. Some patients may still need direct decompression, posterior instrumentation, or another surgical approach.
General surgical risks may include infection, bleeding, persistent pain, nerve injury, failure of fusion, implant-related problems, adjacent-level problems, or need for additional surgery. Approach-related risks may include thigh numbness, thigh pain, hip flexor weakness, lumbar plexus irritation, psoas muscle symptoms, vascular injury, bowel injury, ureter injury, or injury to nearby structures. Individual risks depend on anatomy, spinal level, medical history, and surgical plan.
Treatment planning is individualized. Lateral interbody fusion is one option among several possible treatments for lumbar spine problems.
Non-surgical options may include observation, medication, physical therapy, structured exercise, activity modification, weight management when appropriate, bracing in selected cases, and image-guided injections.
Other surgical options may include lumbar decompression, laminectomy, microdiscectomy, anterior lumbar interbody fusion, transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion, posterior lumbar interbody fusion, posterior fusion, or other reconstruction procedures. These procedures are not interchangeable.
The best option depends on the pain source, nerve compression pattern, instability, alignment, number of levels involved, prior surgery, bone quality, medical risks, and patient goals. Lateral interbody fusion may be useful in selected cases, but it is not automatically better than another approach.
Recovery after lateral interbody fusion varies from person to person. It depends on the reason for surgery, the number of levels treated, whether posterior instrumentation is used, the patient’s neurologic status before surgery, bone quality, and overall health.
Follow-up usually focuses on incision healing, pain control, walking and activity progression, neurologic symptoms, thigh or hip flexor symptoms, medication use, and imaging to monitor spinal alignment, implant position, and fusion healing.
Some patients may need physical therapy or rehabilitation guidance as recovery progresses. Fusion healing takes time, and patients should follow the surgeon’s instructions about lifting, bending, twisting, activity restrictions, nicotine avoidance, medication use, and follow-up imaging.
Seek emergency medical care or call 911 for new or worsening weakness, loss of bowel or bladder control, numbness in the groin or saddle area, difficulty walking, or sudden severe neurologic changes.
Urgent evaluation is also important for severe back pain after trauma, fever with severe back pain, rapidly worsening leg symptoms, or new numbness or weakness that affects standing or walking.
Patients with persistent low back pain, leg pain, numbness, tingling, weakness, or walking difficulty should seek medical evaluation, especially when symptoms interfere with daily activities or continue despite conservative care.
Lateral interbody fusion may be used for selected lumbar spine problems involving disc collapse, instability, spondylolisthesis, foraminal stenosis, scoliosis, or alignment-related disease. It is not used for every patient with low back pain.
Yes. Lateral interbody fusion is often called lateral lumbar interbody fusion, or LLIF. Related terms may include XLIF, DLIF, and other lateral or oblique lumbar interbody fusion approaches, depending on the exact technique.
No. ALIF approaches the lumbar spine from the front of the body. TLIF approaches the disc space from the back and side. Lateral interbody fusion approaches the lumbar spine from the side. Each approach has different anatomical uses, benefits, and risks.
No. Lateral interbody fusion may indirectly open nerve passageways by restoring disc height in selected cases. Some patients still need direct decompression from the back of the spine if nerve compression cannot be adequately addressed indirectly.
Doctors review symptoms, neurologic examination findings, MRI, X-rays, spinal alignment, instability, bone quality, prior treatments, medical risks, and the exact spinal level involved. The decision depends on whether the patient’s anatomy and diagnosis fit the lateral approach.
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Anterior cervical discectomy and fusion (ACDF) is neck surgery that may relieve cervical nerve or spinal cord pressure in selected patients.
Cervical disc replacement is neck surgery that may relieve nerve or spinal cord pressure while preserving motion at the treated level.
Transforaminal interbody fusion is lower-back surgery that may decompress and stabilize selected lumbar spine problems through a back-side approach.