Insertion of spacer “jacks up” spine and returns damaged area to natural state
Only 37, Janie Lee had endured excruciating back pain for 20 years. She couldn’t stay in one position for more than five minutes, and walking hunched over was the only way she could get around. Her search for help took her to several doctors and an emergency room, but it wasn’t until she found Hyun Bae, MD, a renowned spine specialist at Saint John’s Health Center, that she received the diagnosis and care that would return her life to her.
After taking Lee’s MRI, Dr. Bae diagnosed her with spinal stenosis, a narrowing of the spinal canal. Spinal stenosis, which affects about 500,000 people, is usually found in older people due to the wear and tear of aging. But about 15 percent of patients are born with a narrow spinal canal.
“This was the case with Janie,” said Dr. Bae. “The narrowing of her spinal canal was pinching her nerves. Her pain was even more severe because she also had a collapsed vertebral disc at the same location as the narrowed canal.”
Lee knew she was in good hands. “Even though I was in extreme pain, I felt very comfortable with Dr. Bae,” she said. “I trusted that he understood my condition and knew what he was doing.”
Dr. Bae removed the collapsed disc and restored Lee’s spinal canal to an open position by inserting an ILIF, an FDA-approved device he helped develop in collaboration with San Diego–based NuVasive, Inc.
“It’s like a car jack for the back,” he explained. “Done with fiberoptic assistance, the minimally invasive procedure requires an incision of only about an inch and a half, and results in minimal blood loss.”
Patients typically require a one- to two-day hospital stay. Lee needed just three weeks of rehabilitation instead of the three to four months that spinal fusion, the conventional treatment for the condition, requires.
“The nursing staff at Saint John’s was so supportive,” Lee said. And she has high praise for Arbor View Rehabilitation and Wellness Center. The mother of three, now pain-free, is able to do everyday tasks that were previously impossible and is enjoying life. “My back has straightened up and my life is getting straightened up,” she said with a laugh