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Old 02-26-2013, 11:26 PM
NJ Gene NJ Gene is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2013
Posts: 376
Default Check out your surgeons!!

Quote:
Originally Posted by RobertM View Post
Im Robert easy enough. Im 29, married with two kids under 4.
March of 2012 diagnosed with herniated disk L5-S1 to the left side.
2 injections pain free.
July 7 hurt the same disk again. I was getting better with time until the PT decided to rip me in half almost. I don't remember what the procedure was but could barley move afterward. And I have been on a downward spiral.
Spine surgeon at Indy Spine Group wants to do fusion but I have to loose +80 pounds first. I was a truck driver and obviously gained weight. I am working on loosing weight, just hard when you can barley walk a block.
I am seriously looking into ADR done by Dr. Ritter-Lang in Germany. I am getting my stuff together to send over to him to look at. My spine doc doesn't think its a good idea. In fact stated that ADR was not approved in the U.S. for Lumbar. I really just don't know which way to go. If I go ADR I will probably loose my job due to being released MMI. I don't and am not planning on going back to driving, just tired of missing my family, but my family needs health insurance. Both kids were born early one 9 weeks the other 4 weeks so they catch everything.
Robert, I agree with TPatti, do your homework and find out from surgeons who perform ADR, and see what they think. I can safely say that most surgeons in the U.S. who don't perform ADR themselves will not recommend going to one that does. Then for the smaller number that recommend consulting a surgeon who performs it, they will recommend staying in the United States. Unfortunately, the FDA only allows one single level of ADR in the neck and 2 levels in the Lumbar spine. However, getting insurance to cover it is another issue. I cancelled my surgery yesterday with Dr. Ritter-Lang after reading posts in here. My understanding was that he was better several years ago, but is now more interested in running Stenum Hospital like an assembly line. I'm told he does 6 to 7 surgeries a day versus others that do 2 to 3 a day. If you look at Dr. Ritter-Lang's website and read the testimonials, you would think he's the best in the world. You need to realize that 90% of patients probably get better merely by doing the fast surgery that he does. A herniated disc is removed and a new one is put in. Top that off with excellent hospital care by nurses who treat you very well (especially compared to the U.S.) and you will only hear great things about him. However, focus on the 10% of patients who did not have good experiences. I read a post where a woman had a new ADR placed on a level where she had a previous foraminotomy. In many cases, that type of surgery prevents one from being an ADR candidate (at least at that level). This woman was in constant pain afterwards, because the new M6 disc (which never should have been put in there) was causing it. She ultimately had to have it removed and get a fusion in its place. This scared me off, because I also had a foraminotomy at one of the ADR levels Dr. Ritter-Lang is recommending I have done. I saw one posting of a man who had a different type of disc than the M6 placed in him by Dr. Ritter-Lang and wasn't told about it. This wasn't discovered until months later, when the patient had an MRI after complaining of pain and the surgeon at home discovered it wasn't an M6 disc. I hear that Dr. Ritter-Lang's team is very helpful on the phone prior to surgery but very difficult to get a hold of after payment is made.

Contrastly, I've only heard good things about Dr. Pablo Clavel in Barcelona, Dr. Bierstedt in Dusseldorf, and AIMIS Spine in Cyprus. I am currently having all three of these groups evaluate my case. My symptoms are being caused by the new herniation at C6/C7. I want to be sure that ADR is the best solution before having it done. I'm currently suffering the domino effect of two prior fusions putting pressure on the adjacent healthy discs below it. ADR will stop the domino effect. However, I don't want it done at C6/C7 if it's contraindicated. Since my 2 fusions cover C3/C5, I might be able to get ADR at C5/C6, where I currently have a bulge, and then do something else at C6/C7. That's why I'm getting 3 additional opinions. Based on what I heard about Dr. Ritter-Lang, I don't trust him.
__________________
Car Accident 2002 - Small Herniated Disc C3/C4
1998 Larger Herniation and Cervical Fusion C3/C4
2005 Herniation C4/C5 - 40 epidural steroid injections from Oct 2005, - Oct, 2007
2008 - Foraminotomy at C6/C7 on left side
Feb, 2010 - Cervical Fusion C4/C5
Dec, 2010 - Lumbar Fusion L3/L5
2013 - Bulge on C5/C6; herniation C6/C7 right side
Mar 26, 2013 - Foraminotomy at C6/C7 on right side
May 5, 2015 - ADR with Dr Blumenthal of TBI for C5/C6 using Mobi-C
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