Procedure Not Recommended
Risks, Complications & Better Alternatives
⚠️ While Deuk Spine Institute can perform Spinal Fusion, we do not recommend it.
This page explains why — learn the risks before consenting to this procedure.
UNDERSTANDING THE PROCEDURE
While there are legitimate medical reasons, strong financial incentives often drive surgical recommendations for this highly profitable procedure.
Nerve root compression causing radiating pain, numbness, and weakness. However, fusion eliminates motion rather than treating the actual disc injury causing nerve compression.
Canal narrowing causing cord compression. Fusion is frequently recommended even for mild cases where less invasive treatments would be more appropriate.
Kyphosis, scoliosis, listhesis, and spinal instability. While some cases are legitimate, fusion is often overused for conditions that can be treated less invasively.
Spinal fractures and recurrent disc herniations are cited to justify fusion, though the procedure eliminates motion and creates adjacent segment disease.
Rare emergency (<1% of cases) involving severe nerve compression. Often used to justify fusion for much less severe conditions that don’t require it.
Spinal Fusion is one of the highest-reimbursed spine surgeries in the world, creating massive financial incentive even when less invasive options exist.
Extended operating time, multi-day inpatient stays, expensive hardware (screws, rods, cages), and complex post-surgical care drive enormous hospital revenue.
Fusion eliminates motion at the treated level, forcing adjacent segments to compensate. This reliably causes adjacent segment disease, guaranteeing future surgeries.
Over 90% of spinal fusion patients require additional surgery, creating a recurring revenue stream of repeat fusions, hardware revisions, and pain management.
Failed fusions create patients needing ongoing injections, ablations, spinal cord stimulators, and opioid prescriptions for life — a lucrative pain management pipeline.
Screws, rods, cages, and plates cost $10K–$50K per surgery. Medical device companies aggressively market fusion hardware, driving surgeon recommendations.
THE SURGICAL PROCESS
The videos below contain real surgical footage. Viewer discretion is advised.
A 3–8 inch incision is made along the spine to expose the underlying vertebral structures for fusion.
Depending on the approach (ALIF or TLIF), tissues of the abdomen or back are cut through to access the spine.
Spinal muscles are stripped from the bone and retracted, causing permanent damage and weakness.
Normal bones, ligaments, and facet joints are removed. The nerve root is pulled to the side to access the disc space.
The disc is completely removed and replaced with a metal-plastic cage filled with bone graft material.
Holes are drilled into the vertebrae to bolt pedicle screws, connecting rods, or metal plates onto the spine.
Anterior Cervical Discectomy and Fusion removes the neck disc and locks vertebrae together with a metal plate and screws.
CRITICAL RISKS
20 documented reasons with supporting images and surgical footage.
Images and videos below contain real surgical procedures and medical imagery.
DOCUMENTED COMPLICATIONS
Images below show real surgical complications. Viewer discretion is advised.
Permanent nerve damage causing weakness, numbness, or paralysis in extremities.
Dural tears leading to cerebrospinal fluid leaks, requiring additional repair surgery.
Disc herniations reoccur at fused or adjacent levels, requiring additional surgery.
Stenosis persists causing leg or arm pain and pinched nerves after fusion surgery.
Abnormal kyphosis develops above the fusion site, causing deformity and pain.
Weakened vertebrae fracture and implants telescope into the bone, collapsing the spine.
Blood clots, pulmonary embolism, heart attack, and pneumothorax from prolonged surgery.
Persistent or worsened chronic pain following spinal fusion requiring lifelong management.
Sexual dysfunction and retrograde ejaculation, especially common with ALIF procedures.
Extensive scar tissue formation around the spine and nerves causing persistent pain.
Abnormal bone growth and osteonecrosis developing around the surgical site.
Fatal outcomes from surgical complications including hemorrhage, embolism, and organ failure.
Prolonged fluoroscopy during hardware placement exposes patients and staff to high radiation.
Allergic reactions to metal hardware implants including titanium, cobalt, and nickel alloys.
WHAT WE RECOMMEND INSTEAD
Instead of permanently fusing your vertebrae with screws, rods, and cages, Deuk Laser Disc Repair® uses endoscopic technology and laser precision to treat the actual source of pain — the damaged disc — through an incision smaller than a fingernail.
Your spine's stabilizing structures remain completely intact. No lamina, spinous process, or facet joint destruction.
Laser technology directly repairs the damaged disc — the actual source of pain that spinal fusion ignores by simply locking vertebrae together.
Outpatient procedure under light sedation. Walk out the same day — no hospital stay, no intubation, no opioids required.
95% patient satisfaction, 0.01% complication rate, and over 1,300 successful procedures performed by Dr. Deukmedjian.
Feature
Spinal Fusion
Deuk Laser Disc Repair®
Procedure Type
❌ Highly invasive, screws/rods/cages
✅ Minimally invasive, endoscopic
Incision Size
❌ 3–8 inches
✅ Less than 1/4 inch
Anesthesia
❌ General (intubated)
✅ Light IV sedation
Hardware
❌ Screws, rods, cages, plates
✅ None
Treats Disc Injury
❌ No — disc removed, replaced with cage
✅ Yes — laser repairs the disc
Hospital Stay
❌ 2–5 days inpatient
✅ Outpatient — go home same day
Recovery Time
❌ 3–12 months
✅ Days
Complication Rate
❌ High — frequent complications
✅ 0.01%
Success Rate
❌ Variable — high reoperation rates
✅ 95% patient satisfaction
Repeat Surgery
❌ 90%+ need additional surgery
✅ Rarely needed
A BETTER ALTERNATIVE
Minimally invasive, outpatient procedure with a 0.01% complication rate and 95% patient satisfaction. No screws. No rods. No cages. Same-day recovery.
Patient Satisfaction
Complication Rate
Procedure Time