Management Considerations for Total Intervertebral Disc Replacement

World Neurosurg. 2024 Jan:181:125-136. doi: 10.1016/j.wneu.2023.09.100. Epub 2023 Sep 28.

Abstract

The burden of disease regarding lumbar and cervical spine pain is a long-standing, pervasive problem within medicine that has yet to be resolved. Specifically, neck and back pain are associated with chronic pain, disability, and exorbitant health care use worldwide, which have only been exacerbated by the increase in overall life years and chronic disease. Traditionally, patients with significant pain and disability secondary to disease of either the cervical or lumbar spine are treated via fusion or discectomy. Although these interventions have proved curative in the short-term, numerous longitudinal studies evaluating the efficacy of traditional management have reported severe impairment of normal spinal range of motion, as well as postoperative complications, including neurologic injury, radiculopathy, osteolysis, subsidence, and infection, paired with less than desirable reoperation rates. Consequently, there is a call for innovation and improvement in the treatment of lumbar and cervical spine pain, which may be answered by a modern technique known as intervertebral disc arthroplasty, or total disc replacement (TDR). Thus, this review aims to describe the management strategy of TDR and to explore updated considerations for its use in practice, both to help guide clinical decision making.

Keywords: Degenerative disc disease; Intervertebral disc arthroplasty; Total disc replacement.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Cervical Vertebrae / surgery
  • Diskectomy / methods
  • Follow-Up Studies
  • Humans
  • Intervertebral Disc Degeneration* / complications
  • Intervertebral Disc Degeneration* / surgery
  • Intervertebral Disc* / surgery
  • Neck Pain / surgery
  • Spinal Fusion* / methods
  • Total Disc Replacement* / methods
  • Treatment Outcome