Lumbar Disc Replacement
Lumbar disc replacement is lower-back surgery that may replace a damaged disc while preserving motion in carefully selected patients.
Spinal tumor removal is surgery to remove all or part of a tumor involving the spine, spinal canal, spinal cord, nerve roots, or surrounding bones. It is also called spinal tumor resection, spine tumor surgery, or spinal cord tumor surgery, depending on where the tumor is located.
Spinal tumors are not all the same. Some begin in the spine or spinal cord. Others spread to the spine from cancer somewhere else in the body. Some grow inside the spinal cord, some grow around the spinal cord, and others grow in the bones of the spine.
The goal of spinal tumor removal is not always complete removal. Depending on the tumor, the goal may be to remove as much tumor as safely appropriate, obtain tissue for diagnosis, relieve pressure on the spinal cord or nerves, stabilize the spine, reduce pain from mechanical instability, or support radiation, chemotherapy, or other oncology treatment.
De Novo Brain & Spine evaluates adult patients in Stockbridge, Fayetteville, Atlanta, and surrounding Georgia communities to help determine whether spinal tumor removal, biopsy, radiation, medical oncology, observation, stabilization, or another treatment plan may be appropriate.
Spinal tumor removal may be considered for selected tumors affecting the spine, spinal cord, nerve roots, or spinal bones. It is not appropriate for every spinal tumor, and some tumors are better treated with observation, radiation, chemotherapy, targeted therapy, biopsy, or multidisciplinary cancer care.
Conditions or situations that may lead to consideration of spinal tumor removal include:
The treatment decision depends on tumor type, location, growth pattern, neurologic symptoms, spinal stability, cancer history, overall health, and whether surgery is likely to help more than it harms.
Spinal tumor removal may be considered when a tumor is pressing on the spinal cord, cauda equina, or nerve roots. Pressure on these structures can cause pain, numbness, weakness, walking difficulty, balance problems, or changes in bowel or bladder control.
Surgery may also be considered when the tumor weakens the bones of the spine and causes instability, fracture, deformity, or severe mechanical pain. In those cases, the surgical plan may include stabilization with screws, rods, cages, bone graft, or other reconstruction.
For some tumors, surgery may be considered to obtain tissue for diagnosis. A pathologist can examine the tumor tissue to identify the tumor type and guide additional treatment.
For metastatic spine tumors, surgery is often part of a larger treatment plan. Radiation therapy, systemic cancer treatment, pain management, steroids, bracing, rehabilitation, or palliative care may also be important. Surgery may be considered when there is neurologic compression, mechanical instability, tissue diagnosis needs, or selected pain and function goals.
Spinal tumor removal may be urgent when there is rapid neurologic decline, severe spinal cord compression, worsening weakness, or loss of bowel or bladder control.
Doctors determine whether spinal tumor removal may be appropriate by reviewing symptoms, neurologic examination findings, imaging, tumor type, spinal stability, cancer history, prior treatments, and overall health.
Evaluation may include:
Decision-making may consider neurologic compression, tumor sensitivity to radiation or systemic therapy, mechanical stability of the spine, and the patient’s overall medical condition. These factors help determine whether surgery, radiation, medication, biopsy, stabilization, or observation is the best next step.
Spinal tumor removal is performed under anesthesia. The surgical approach depends on where the tumor is located.
Some tumors are reached from the back of the spine through a laminectomy or similar decompression. Other tumors may require an approach from the front, side, or a combined route. Tumors inside the dura, which is the covering around the spinal cord and nerves, may require opening the dura to reach the tumor.
The surgeon may remove as much tumor as safely appropriate. When the tumor is close to the spinal cord, nerve roots, or major blood vessels, complete removal may not be safe. In those cases, partial removal, decompression, or biopsy may be the better goal.
If the tumor weakens the spine, the surgeon may also stabilize the spine with screws, rods, cages, bone graft, or other reconstruction. In some metastatic spine cases, surgery may focus on separating tumor from the spinal cord so radiation can be delivered more safely afterward.
Tissue removed during surgery is usually sent to pathology. Pathology results help guide the next steps, which may include observation, radiation, chemotherapy, targeted therapy, immunotherapy, or additional surgery.
The goals of spinal tumor removal depend on the tumor type and the patient’s condition. Surgery may be intended to remove as much tumor as safely appropriate, obtain tissue for diagnosis, relieve pressure on the spinal cord or nerves, stabilize the spine, reduce mechanical pain, or support additional cancer treatment.
Potential benefits may include reduced spinal cord or nerve compression, improved spinal stability, better diagnostic clarity, or support for radiation or oncology treatment planning. Improvement is not guaranteed, and neurologic recovery can vary.
Spinal tumor removal has important limitations. It may not cure the tumor. It may not remove all tumor cells. It may not reverse all spinal cord or nerve injury. It does not guarantee pain relief, walking recovery, tumor control, cancer control, or long-term survival.
General risks may include infection, bleeding, spinal fluid leak, nerve injury, spinal cord injury, weakness, numbness, paralysis, pain, instability, hardware problems, failure of fusion, blood clots, wound healing problems, tumor recurrence, or need for additional treatment. Risks depend on tumor location, tumor type, neurologic status, prior treatment, medical health, and the surgical plan.
Treatment planning for spinal tumors is individualized and often multidisciplinary. Spinal tumor removal is one possible option, but it is not the right treatment for every spinal tumor.
Other options may include:
These options are not interchangeable. The best plan depends on the tumor type, whether the tumor is primary or metastatic, the degree of spinal cord or nerve compression, spinal stability, prior radiation, systemic cancer status, expected benefit, medical risk, and patient goals.
Recovery after spinal tumor removal varies widely. It depends on the tumor location, tumor type, extent of surgery, whether fusion or stabilization is performed, neurologic status before surgery, prior radiation or cancer treatment, and overall health.
Follow-up usually focuses on incision healing, neurologic function, walking, pain control, medication use, pathology results, imaging, and whether additional oncology treatment is needed.
Some patients may need physical therapy, occupational therapy, inpatient rehabilitation, radiation oncology, medical oncology, pain management, or long-term imaging surveillance. Follow-up MRI or CT imaging may be used to monitor for residual tumor, recurrence, spinal alignment, hardware position, or fusion healing.
Symptoms caused by spinal cord or nerve compression may improve at different rates. Some symptoms may persist if the spinal cord or nerves were significantly compressed or injured before treatment.
Seek emergency medical care or call 911 for new or worsening weakness, difficulty walking, loss of bowel or bladder control, numbness in the groin or saddle area, sudden severe back or neck pain, or rapid neurologic decline.
Urgent evaluation is also important for severe spine pain with a known cancer history, fever with severe spine pain, new numbness or weakness, new balance problems, or severe pain after a fall or injury.
Patients with a known spinal tumor should seek prompt medical evaluation if pain worsens quickly, neurologic symptoms change, or new bowel, bladder, walking, or strength problems develop.
Spinal tumor removal may be used to remove as much tumor as safely appropriate, obtain tissue for diagnosis, relieve pressure on the spinal cord or nerves, or stabilize the spine when a tumor weakens the spinal bones.
No. Complete removal depends on tumor type, location, relationship to the spinal cord and nerves, and overall medical condition. Some tumors can be removed completely, while others are safer to biopsy, partially remove, decompress, or treat with radiation or medication.
Not exactly. Spinal tumor removal is one part of treatment for selected tumors. Some patients also need radiation, chemotherapy, targeted therapy, immunotherapy, rehabilitation, pain management, or ongoing imaging.
Doctors review symptoms, neurologic examination, MRI or CT findings, tumor type, spinal stability, cancer history, prior treatment, overall health, and whether surgery is likely to help with diagnosis, decompression, stability, pain, or treatment planning.
Seek urgent medical care for new weakness, trouble walking, loss of bowel or bladder control, numbness in the groin or saddle area, rapidly worsening pain, or severe spine pain in a patient with known cancer.
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Lumbar disc replacement is lower-back surgery that may replace a damaged disc while preserving motion in carefully selected patients.
Cervical posterior fusion is neck surgery that may stabilize the cervical spine when instability, deformity, or decompression requires support.
Cervical disc replacement is neck surgery that may relieve nerve or spinal cord pressure while preserving motion at the treated level.