Contemporary Endoscopic Spine Surgery brings the reader the most
up-to-date information on the endoscopy of the spine. Key opinion
leaders from around the world have come together to present the
clinical evidence behind their competitive endoscopic spinal surgery
protocols. Chapters in the series cover a range of aspects of spine
surgery including spinal pain generators, preoperative workup with
modern independent predictors of favorable clinical outcomes with
endoscopy, anesthesia in an outpatient setting, management of
complications, and a fresh look at technology advances in a historical
context. The reader will have a first-row seat during the illustrative
discussions of expanded surgical indications from herniated disc to
more complex clinical problems, including stenosis, instability, and
deformity in patients with advanced degenerative disease of the human
spine. Contemporary Endoscopic Spine Surgery is divided into three
volumes: Cervical Spine, Lumbar Spine, and Advanced Technologies to
capture an accurate snapshot in time of this fast-moving field. It is
intended as a comprehensive go-to reference text for surgeons in
graduate residency and postgraduate fellowship training programs and
for practicing spine surgeons interested in looking for the scientific
foundation for their practice expansion into endoscopic surgery.
This volume (Lumbar Spine) covers the following topics in 18 detailed chapters:
Lumbar endoscopy: historical perspectives, present, and future
Endoscopic lumbar discectomy - anatomy, nomenclature, indications and
advanced techniques
Current approaches for the treatment of endstage vacuum degenerative
lumbar disc disease
Advanced endoscopic techniques of lumbar foraminotomy and treatment of
degenerative spondylolisthesis
Endoscopic treatment of lumbar facet cysts
Endoscopic techniques for the treatment of a wide range of chronic low back pain
Endoscopic spine surgery techniques in the elderly
Endoscopic fusion techniques
Endoscopic resection of schwannoma
Technical notes for difficult cases, controversies and complications
of lumbar endoscopy.