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Endoscopic Laser Cervical Discectomy

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What Is Endoscopic Laser Cervical Discectomy?

This is the most advanced outpatient cervical spine procedure available in 2025 for treating a herniated or bulging cervical disc that is compressing a nerve root or pressing on the spinal cord.

It combines full-endoscopic visualization through a 6–8 mm incision with a precise side-firing holmium:YAG or thulium laser to:

– Shrink bulging disc material (decompression without removal)

– Vaporize small herniated fragments

– Reduce inflammation inside the disc and around the nerve

– Perform virtually bloodless surgery

Best Candidates for the Procedure

You may be an excellent candidate if you have:

– Arm pain, numbness, or weakness that is clearly worse than neck pain (radiculopathy)

– MRI showing a contained or small-to-medium herniation (foraminal or posterolateral)

– Positive response to a selective nerve root block

– Failed 6–12 weeks of conservative treatment (physical therapy, medications, injections)

– No large free fragments, severe spondylosis, or spinal instability

How the Procedure Is Performed (25-50 minutes)

1. General anesthesia or conscious sedation with local anesthesia

2. You lie face-down; a 6-8 mm incision is made on the back of the neck

3. Under live X-ray guidance, a spinal needle is placed into the disc or foraminal zone

4. A 7-8 mm working cannula is inserted; the high-definition endoscope enters with continuous irrigation

5. The surgeon sees the herniated disc and compressed nerve in real time on a large monitor

6. Tiny graspers remove any loose fragments

7. The laser fiber is introduced:

• Low-energy mode shrinks the bulging annulus

• Higher energy vaporizes small fragments

• Thermal effect reduces inflammation and calms the nerve

8. Decompression is confirmed when the nerve root pulsates freely

9. Instruments removed – usually closed with just a band-aid or one stitch

Recovery Timeline (Typical)

  • Day of surgery: Home same day, mild neck stiffness
  • Day 1-3: Over-the-counter pain medicine usually sufficient
  • Day 3-10: 80-90% of arm pain gone; most patients return to office work
  • Week 2: Resume driving and light exercise
  • Week 4-6: Return to full activities, gym, and sports as tolerated

Success Rates (2023-2025 Studies)

  • Excellent or good arm pain relief: 90-96%
  • Re-herniation at the same level: 2-6%
  • Need for subsequent fusion: <2%
  • Overall patient satisfaction: 94-97%

Risks (Extremely Low)

  • Infection: <0.2%
  • Temporary increased arm pain/numbness: 3-7% (resolves quickly)
  • Transient hoarseness or swallowing discomfort: rare and short-lived
  • Very rare serious complications: nerve injury, bleeding, vertebral artery injury

When to Call Your Surgeon Immediately

  • Fever >101.5 °F (38.6 °C)
  • New or worsening arm/hand weakness
  • Difficulty swallowing or speaking
  • Severe headache when standing up
  • Redness, swelling, or drainage from the incision

Ready for a “Band-Aid” Back Surgery?

Endoscopic laser cervical discectomy represents the pinnacle of motion-preserving, ultra-minimally invasive neck surgery.

If you suffer from arm pain caused by a herniated cervical disc, ask an experienced endoscopic spine surgeon whether you are a candidate for this revolutionary same-day procedure.

© 2026 – For patient education only. Individual results may vary. Always consult with your qualified spine surgeon.

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