Summary
Minimally invasive techniques for the treatment of degenerative pathology of the spine have come to be preferred by surgeons since the destructive effect on bony structures is eliminated and scar formation is dramatically reduced. A critical review of the pathogenetic mechanisms for low back pain and sciatalgia has recently yielded that mechanical compression is one but non essential component of the matter. The importance of chemical irritative processes is stressed. Coblation nucleoplasty is one of these minimally invasive techniques. It provokes ablation of the nucleus of the disk by a controlled thermal effect produced by radiofrequency. By this procedure one to two ml of tissue are colliquated in a few minutes. From February 2001 to May 2003 we treated 1390 patients for of lumbosciatalgic pain caused by disc pathology. The alteration consisted of disc bulging or contained disc herniation. Exclusion criteria as provided by the protocol of the multicentric study conceived by Conor O’Neill have been respected. This technique has been conceived in order to obtain progressive results in cases of contained disc herniation which has scanty natural tendency to shrinkage, as demonstrated by several studies on the natural history of evolution of this pathology. Contained disc herniation is a pathology most difficult to manage by conservative procedures, physiotherapy and drugs, but we all agree that open surgery should be avoided. By this minimally invasive procedure the patient will not be compelled to abandon physiotherapy and his normal daily activities for more than a few days.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Alexandre A, Corò L, Salgado H, Azuelos A, Buric J, Albareal Salas A, Murga M (2000) Nucleoplasty treatment of contained herniated discs. Starting a new experience. Proceedings, 12 World Congress of Neurosurgery, Sydney, 14–18 September
Alexandre A, Giocoli H (2002) The natural history of lumbar disc herniation. An analysis of the literature. 30 Congreso Latino-Americano de neurocirugia, Lima, Peru, Octubre 14–19
Alini M, Roughley PJ, Antoniou J et al (2002) A biological approach to treating disc degeneration: not for today, but maybe tomorrow. Eur Spine 11: 15–20
Andreula C (1999) Ernie discali lombo-sacrali e patologia degenerativa correlata: trattamenti interventistici spinali. Riv Neurorad 14[Suppl] 3: 30537–30637
Benson K, Hartz AJ (2000) A comparison of observational studies and randomized, controlled trials. New Engl J Med 342:1878–1886
Bjurholm A, Kreichergs A, Brodin E et al (1988) Substance P and CGRP immunoreactive nerves fiber in bone. Peptides 9:165–171
Case RB, Choy DS, Altman P (1985) Intervertebral disc pressure as a function of fluidvolume infused. J Clin Laser Med Surg 13: 143–147
Chen YC, Lee S, Date ES et al (2001) Histology findings of disc and neural tissues status post percutaneous disc decompression: nucleoplasty (coblation technology): an experimental study. In proceedings of ISIS 9th annual scientific meeting. San Francisco CA
Chen YC, Lee S (2001) A safety study by obtaining spinal temperature during nucleoplasty. In proceedings of ISIS 9th annual scientific meeting. San Francisco CA
Chen YC, Lee S (2001) Intradiscal pressure study with nucleo-plasty. In proceedings of ISIS 9th annual scientific meeting. San Francisco CA
Chen Y, Lee S-H et al (2002) Nucleoplasty for chronic discogenic back pain with or without sciatica: a preliminary study, personal communication
Concato JC, Shah N, Honwitz RI (2000) Randomized controlled trials, observational studies, and the hierarchy of research designs. New Engl J Med 342: 1887–1892
Eggars PE, Thapliyal HV et al (1997) Coablation: a newly described method for soft tissue surgery. Res Outcomes Arthroscopic Surg 2(1)
Fagan A, Moore R, Roberts BV, Blumberg P, Frasen R (2003) iSSLS Prize Winner: the innervation of the intervertebral disc: a quantitative analysis. Spine 28(23): 2570–2576
Greenfield K, Egger M, Nelson RJ, Findlay GF, Sanford E (2002) Microdiscectomy vs. conservative treatment for lumbar disc Herniation: a randomised clinical trial. 17th Annual Meeting of the North American Spine Society; October 29–November 2
Kanayama M, Hashimoto T, Shigenobu K, Yamane S (2003) Efficacy of serotonin receptor blocker for symptomatic lumbar disc herniation. Clin Orthop 411: 159–165
Kuslik SD, Ulstrom CL, Michael CJ (1991) The tissue origin of back pain and sciatica: a report of pain response to tissue stimulation during operations on the lumbar spine using local an-aesthesia. Orthop Clin North Am 22: 181–187
Mochida J, Tos E, Nomura T et al (2001) The risks and benefits of percutaneous nucleotomy for lumbar disc herniations: a 10-year longitudinal study. J Bone Joint Surg Br 83: 501–505
O’Neil C (2003) Percutaneous plasma discectomy stimulates repair in injured porcine intervertebral discs. Eurospine, poster
Saal J, Saal JS, Herzog R (1990) The natural history of the lumbar intervertebral disc extrusion treated nonoperatively. Spine 15: 683–686
Sharps L, Isaac Z (2002) Percutaneous disc decompression using Nucleoplasty. Pain Physician 5: 121–126
Troussier B et al (1995) Percutaneous intradiscal radiofrequency thermocoagulation: a cadaveric study. Spine 20(15): 1713–1718
Woloszko J, Stalder KR, Brown IA (2001) Plasma characteristics of repetitively-pulsed electrical discharges in salire solutions used for surgical procedures. IEEE Transactions on Plasma Sci. Vol 30 N3: 1376–1383
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2005 Springer-Verlag
About this paper
Cite this paper
Alexandre, A., Corò, L., Azuelos, A., Pellone, M. (2005). Percutaneous nucleoplasty for discoradicular conflict. In: Alexandre, A., Bricolo, A., Millesi, H. (eds) Advanced Peripheral Nerve Surgery and Minimal Invasive Spinal Surgery. Acta Neurochirurgica, vol 97. Springer, Vienna. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-211-27458-8_18
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/3-211-27458-8_18
Publisher Name: Springer, Vienna
Print ISBN: 978-3-211-23368-9
Online ISBN: 978-3-211-27458-3
eBook Packages: MedicineMedicine (R0)