By Dr. Ara Deukmedjian
Board-Certified Neurosurgeon
Medically reviewed on May 22, 2026
Medical Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Sam, the chatbot described in this article, also does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Individual results vary. Always consult a qualified spine specialist about your specific condition and treatment options. If you are experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency department.
Key Points
✓ Sam is a free, always-on chatbot now available across every page of the Deuk Spine Institute website. It is built specifically to help patients who have already been told they need spine surgery understand their options before they consent to an operation.
✓ Sam exclusively understands Dr. Deukmedjian’s published clinical content. Peer-reviewed research, procedure pages, patient testimonials, and the Deuk Spine blog; not the open internet. It does not invent answers, and it does not pull from unverified sources.
✓ Sam does not diagnose, prescribe, or replace a physician. It is an information tool. When a question requires clinical judgment, Sam says so and directs you to speak with Dr. Deuk for a free virtual MRI review .
✓ Sam is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week, including the late-night hours when patients facing a fusion or laminectomy recommendation are most likely to be researching their options.
✓ Sam recognizes red-flag symptoms: cauda equina syndrome, progressive weakness, loss of bladder or bowel control, severe pain after trauma. And instructs patients to seek emergency care immediately rather than continuing the conversation.
✓ When a patient is ready for a real opinion on their actual imaging, Sam sends a direct link to the Free MRI Review form, where Dr. Deukmedjian’s team reviews the case personally.

Why We Built Sam
Most patients who land on DeukSpine arrived after a surgeon, somewhere else, told them they need a fusion, a laminectomy, or a discectomy. They are not casually browsing. They are anxious, often in pain, and trying to figure out their options. Usually alone at night wondering whether the operation they have been scheduled for is the right one.

The published evidence on second opinions in spine surgery makes their anxiety entirely rational. A scoping review in Cureus found that 61.3% of second opinions in spine surgery disagree with the original recommendation, and 75% of those disagreements recommend conservative care instead of the proposed operation.¹ A separate prospective study of 485 patients already recommended for spine surgery found that only 15.5% received the same surgical recommendation after a structured second-opinion review.² The diagnosis itself changed in 59.8% of cases.²
In other words, the patient who is up at 2:00 a.m. searching “do I really need spinal fusion” is asking exactly the right question. The problem has never been the question. The problem has been getting a trustworthy answer at the moment the question is being asked.
Sam exists to close that gap.
What Sam Is
Sam is an artificial intelligence chatbot integrated into every page of deukspine.com. It opens with a single click. There is no login, no patient form, no insurance check, and no fee. You can ask it a question in plain English, the way you would ask a friend who happened to be a spine surgeon, and it will respond with information drawn directly from Dr. Deukmedjian’s clinical work.
What makes Sam different from a general-purpose AI chatbot is the source material. Sam is not pulling answers from random forums, content farms, or the open web. Its knowledge is restricted to:
- Dr. Deukmedjian’s peer-reviewed publications and patents
- The Deuk Spine Institute procedure pages for Deuk Laser Disc Repair®, Deuk Plasma Rhizotomy®, and Deuk Piriformis Release®
- The full Deuk Spine blog archive, including comparisons of fusion, laminectomy, discectomy, and minimally invasive alternatives
- Verified patient testimonials and live surgery archives
- The Deuk Spine FAQ and educational resources
If a question falls outside that body of clinical content, Sam says so. It does not guess.
What Sam Can Help You With
Patients arrive at the Deuk Spine site at different points in their decision. Sam is built to be useful at any of them.

Understanding Your Diagnosis
Patients are routinely told they have a “bad disc,” “stenosis,” or “degeneration” without anyone explaining what those words actually mean for their spine, their pain, or their treatment options. Sam can walk you through:
- What a herniated disc is and how it generates pain
- The difference between a disc bulge, a protrusion, and an extrusion
- What spinal stenosis is and why it produces leg symptoms
- How facet joint pain differs from disc pain
- What “degenerative disc disease” actually is and what it does not
Sam will also help decode the terminology in your MRI report. If your imaging mentions a “paracentral protrusion at L4-L5 with effacement of the traversing L5 nerve root,” Sam can translate that into plain English or other languages and explain which symptoms typically correlate with that finding.
Understanding the Surgery You’ve Been Recommended
If a surgeon has recommended a spinal fusion, a laminectomy, or a discectomy, Sam can explain. Citing Dr. Deukmedjian’s published positions and the broader medical literature. What the procedure actually involves, what the published complication rates are, what the recovery looks like, and what the long-term track record is, including the risk of adjacent segment disease and Failed Back Surgery Syndrome.
This is not a substitute for the conversation you should be having with your surgeon. It is preparation for that conversation. Patients who walk into a pre-operative consultation already understanding the procedure ask sharper questions and consent more carefully.
Understanding the Alternatives
Most patients who are told they need fusion are not told what else exists. Sam can explain the minimally invasive alternatives Deuk Spine has to offer.
Sam can explain the procedures Dr. Deukmedjian developed and performs at Deuk Spine Institute, including Deuk Laser Disc Repair® for discogenic pain and Deuk Plasma Rhizotomy® for facet and SI joint pain. And the Deuk Piriformis Release for Piriformis syndrome. Sam will describe how they work, what conditions they treat, what the incision size and recovery time, and how they differ from traditional open surgery.
Practical Questions About the Process
Sam can also answer the logistical questions patients have once they are seriously considering treatment at Deuk Spine. These include:
- How the Free MRI Review works and what to expect from it
- How workers’ compensation cases are handled
- What to expect on the day of surgery and during recovery
- How to access the live surgery archive and patient testimonials
When a question requires personalized information: like coverage for your specific plan, your specific medical history, or your specific imaging. Sam will tell you the next appropriate steps.
What Sam Will Not Do
The boundaries matter as much as the capabilities. For a chatbot operating in the spine-surgery space, the things it refuses to do are the most important things about it.

Sam will not diagnose you. A diagnosis requires examination, imaging review by a physician, and clinical correlation. Sam can explain what a finding on your MRI typically means and what symptoms typically correlate with it. It cannot tell you what is causing your pain. Only a physician reviewing your actual imaging and your actual symptoms can do that.
Sam will not recommend a specific treatment for your specific case. Sam can describe the treatment options that exist for a given condition. It will not say “you should have Deuk Laser Disc Repair” or “you should not have fusion.” Those are clinical decisions that require an examination and an MRI review by Dr. Deukmedjian or another qualified specialist.
Sam will not prescribe, adjust, or comment on your medications. Medication management is the responsibility of your prescribing physician.
Sam will not handle protected health information. Sam is an informational tool. It does not collect, store, or transmit personal medical information. When the conversation reaches the point where your actual imaging needs to be reviewed, Sam sends you a link to the Free MRI Review form, where the appropriate intake happens in a secure environment.
Sam will not minimize emergency symptoms. If you describe symptoms consistent with cauda equina syndrome. A sudden loss of bladder or bowel control, rapidly progressive weakness in both legs. Sam will stop the educational conversation and instruct you to call 911 or go to the nearest emergency department immediately. The same applies to suspected acute spinal cord compression, unstable spinal fracture, or rapidly progressive motor weakness such as foot drop developing over hours.
A second opinion is appropriate for an elective fusion recommendation. It is not appropriate for cauda equina syndrome. Sam knows the difference.
How Sam Connects You to Real Care

Sam is the first step, not the destination. The destination is for any patient who wants an actual independent opinion on their actual spine to request a free virtual consultation of their MRI.
When a conversation with Sam reaches the natural point where the next step is to have Dr. Deukmedjian’s team look at your imaging, Sam sends you a direct link to the Free MRI Review form. You upload your MRI. Dr. Deuk reviews it. Then Dr. Deuk will speak with you and explain the MRI findings and give you surgery options to treat your spine condition.
There is no charge. There is no obligation to travel to Florida. There is no obligation to choose Deuk Spine for your care. The review exists because the published evidence on second opinions in spine surgery is strong enough that we believe every patient facing fusion deserves one, regardless of where they ultimately get their treatment.
Sam exists to make the front door of that process easier to find at the moment the patient actually wants it. Any day of the week 24/7/365. Sam is here to help you.
Who Sam Is Built For
Sam is built for the patient who:

- Has been told they need a spinal fusion, a laminectomy, or another open spine procedure and is not sure it is the right choice
- Wants to understand what their MRI report actually says before their next consultation
- Has been told their condition is “degenerative” and wants to know whether non-surgical options have been fully explored
- Is researching alternatives to open back surgery and wants to understand minimally invasive options
- Has had previous spine surgery and is now being told they need a revision
- Is helping a parent, spouse, or family member make a major spine-surgery decision and wants to understand the choices on their behalf
Sam is not built to replace the conversation with your surgeon, your primary care doctor, or your physical therapist. It is built to help you walk into those conversations better informed than you walked out of the last one.

How to Use Sam
Sam appears as a chat icon on every page of deukspine.com. Click it. Type your question. Read the answer. Ask the next question. There is no script and no menu of pre-set options — you can write the way you would write a text message to a knowledgeable friend.
A few practical suggestions for getting the most out of it:
- Be specific. “I have lower back pain” is harder to help with than “I have lower back pain that goes down my left leg to my foot, my MRI mentions an L5-S1 disc herniation, and my surgeon recommended a fusion.”
- Bring your MRI report. You can paste sections of your radiology report directly into the chat. Sam can help translate the terminology.
- Ask the follow-up questions. If an answer is unclear, ask Sam to explain it differently. If you want sources, ask for the source. If you want to know how a procedure compares to another, ask.
- Use Sam before, not instead of, your consultation. The goal is to walk into the appointment knowing what questions to ask.
When to Use Sam and When Not To
The Bottom Line
The decision to undergo spine surgery is one of the most consequential medical decisions a person will ever make. Hardware cannot be unscrewed. Fused vertebrae cannot be unfused. Removed bone does not grow back. Between 10% and 40% of traditional spine surgery patients develop chronic pain that persists or worsens after the operation,³ ⁴ and the success rate of each subsequent revision drops sharply.³
Patients deserve to walk into that decision informed. They deserve to understand their diagnosis, the procedure they have been offered, and the alternatives that exist. They deserve answers to the questions they are asking at 2:00 a.m., not just the questions that fit into a 15-minute office visit.
That is what Sam is for. Open the chat on any page of deukspine.com and ask the question you’ve been carrying around. If the answer points to a need for a real review of your actual imaging, the Free MRI Review is one click away.
The cost of an extra conversation is nothing. The cost of the wrong spine surgery is everything.

Frequently Asked Questions
Is Sam a real doctor?
No. Sam is an AI chatbot. It is grounded in Dr. Deukmedjian’s published clinical content, but it is not a physician, and it does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Any clinical decision about your spine should be made with a qualified spine specialist who has reviewed your actual imaging and examined you in person — which is exactly what the Free MRI Review is for.
Is Sam free to use?
Yes. Sam is free, available on every page of deukspine.com, and does not require an account, a login, or any personal information to start a conversation.
Does Sam store my medical information?
No. Sam is an informational tool and is not designed to collect or store protected health information. When the conversation reaches a point where your actual medical details need to be shared — for example, to have your MRI reviewed — Sam sends you a link to the Free MRI Review form, where intake happens through the secure clinical process.
Can Sam tell me whether I really need surgery?
No. That determination requires a physician to examine you and personally review your imaging. Sam can explain what your diagnosis means, what your surgical options are, and what the alternatives look like. To get an actual second opinion on whether the surgery you’ve been recommended is appropriate, submit your MRI for a Free MRI Review.
What languages does Sam speak?
Sam responds in the language you write in. For complex clinical questions, we recommend using the language you are most comfortable reading carefully in, since precision matters more than convenience when the subject is your spine.
Will Sam recommend Deuk Spine over my current surgeon?
No. Sam is not built as a sales tool. It is built to explain conditions, procedures, and alternatives accurately. When a patient asks about Deuk Spine’s procedures, Sam will explain them — the same way it will explain fusion or laminectomy if asked. The decision about where to receive care is yours.
What if Sam doesn’t know the answer to my question?
Sam will tell you it does not know. It will not invent an answer. In most cases, it will then direct you either to the relevant page on deukspine.com, to the Free MRI Review, or — if your question is outside the scope of what a chatbot can responsibly address — to a phone call with the Deuk Spine team or a visit to your own physician.
Is Sam available outside of business hours?
Yes. Sam is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week, including evenings, weekends, and holidays. The Free MRI Review form is also available around the clock; the review itself is performed by Dr. Deukmedjian’s team during clinical hours.
Can I use Sam on my phone?
Yes. Sam is available on the full deukspine.com website, including the mobile site.
What if I’m experiencing a medical emergency?
Do not use Sam. Call 911 or go to the nearest emergency department. Sudden loss of bladder or bowel control, saddle numbness, rapidly progressive weakness, severe spine pain after trauma, or fever with severe back pain can indicate cauda equina syndrome, spinal cord compression, or spinal infection — all surgical emergencies that require immediate care.
Sources
-
Second opinion in spine surgery: A scoping review. National Library of Medicine.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8422531/ -
Second opinion for degenerative spinal conditions: an option or a necessity? A prospective observational study. BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5561586/ -
Failed Back Surgery Syndrome: A Review Article. Asian Spine Journal. 2018;12(2):372–379.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29713421/ -
Failed back surgery syndrome: current perspectives. Journal of Pain Research.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5106227/