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Posterior lumbar interbody fusion (PLIF)

Description

Description

A type of lumbar fusion procedure. A lumbar fusion is the locking together (fusing) of multiple spinal vertebrae of the back to help relieve the pressure placed on the nerves from movement of the spine. The procedure is done from the back and includes removing the disc between two vertebrae and inserting bone graft into the space created between the two vertebral bodies. The bone graft can be taken from the patient's hip (autograft bone) during the spine fusion surgery, harvested from cadaver bone (allograft bone) or manufactured (synthetic bone graft substitute) The surgery is done to relieve the pain and numbness caused by herniated disc, spinal stenosis, spondylolisthesis, and arthritis.

Cost

Cost

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Common Complications

Common Complications

Complications include: vertebrae failing to fuse, hardware fracture, bone graft migration, nerve damage or persistent pain. All surgery comes with the risk of infection and blood clots. General anesthesia runs the risk of allergic reactions or breathing problems.




Research

Research



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