Vertrae® 360
Pain after spine surgery can be confusing, discouraging, and emotionally exhausting — especially when the surgery was technically successful, but the pain remains. In this episode of Vertrae® 360 Spine Talk, we explore Persistent Spinal Pain Syndrome, or PSPS, the diagnosis that has formally replaced the outdated term “failed back surgery syndrome.” This shift matters because persistent pain after spine surgery is not about blame. It is about understanding the biological, structural, neurological, and emotional factors that can continue driving pain after surgery. Drawing from the clinical framework of Dr. Kamal Woods at Vertrae® Surgery Center in Dayton, Ohio, this episode explains why pain can persist after spine surgery, including causes such as epidural fibrosis, adjacent segment disease, recurrent disc herniation, unaddressed facet joint pain, Modic changes, and central sensitization. You’ll also hear why the length of time someone had pain before surgery can influence recovery, how anxiety and depression affect the nervous system’s response to pain, and why a fresh re-evaluation can help identify what is generating symptoms today. Topics covered include: * Why “failed back surgery syndrome” is no longer the preferred term * What Persistent Spinal Pain Syndrome means * Why pain can persist after technically successful spine surgery * Epidural fibrosis, adjacent segment disease, and recurrent disc herniation * Central sensitization and chronic nerve pain * How preoperative pain duration affects PSPS risk * The role of anxiety, depression, sleep disruption, and emotional trauma * Why fresh evaluation matters after persistent pain * Spinal cord stimulation for neuropathic leg pain * ReActiv8® restorative neurostimulation for multifidus dysfunction * Why the next step is not blame, but better diagnosis Seeking a second evaluation after spine surgery is not a betrayal of your original surgeon or an admission that the first decision was wrong. It is an appropriate clinical step when pain persists and a new diagnosis may be needed. This episode is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you experience sudden loss of bladder or bowel control, new numbness in the groin or saddle area, sudden weakness in the legs, fever with severe back pain, or rapidly worsening neurological symptoms, seek emergency medical care immediately.
29 episodios
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