Endoscopic Spine Surgery
As life expectancy increases and spinal diseases become more common, endoscopic spine surgery is becoming more important, especially for elderly patients with spinal disease. It can now be used to treat many degenerative spine conditions, including large, herniated discs and spinal stenosis. Many studies show that endoscopic spine surgery can be safely used to treat spine conditions in the neck, upper back, and lower back, including tumors, trauma, and deformities.
Dr. Ball has performed minimally invasive spine surgery and endoscopic spine surgery for more than two decades and has educated other spine surgeons about minimally invasive techniques for the spine. Minimally invasive surgery allows Dr. Ball to use specific surgical techniques that limit the size and number of incisions needed during a surgical procedure. Less trauma to the tissues results in less pain, less blood loss, and quicker recovery times.
Endoscopic spine surgery is the next level of minimally invasive spinal surgery. It has expanded in use due to recent improvements in endoscopic instruments, including the endoscope. This makes it more applicable to a wider range of spinal problems and allows personalizing surgery to meet each patient’s specific needs.
Contact Dr. Hieu Ball to schedule a consultation at his San Ramon. He offers a full range of treatments for neck pain. Dr. Ball offers state-of-the-art patient-centered care for patients with neck, mid-back, and low-back problems. He received his orthopedic and spine surgery residency and fellowship training at Harvard Medical School and UCLA-affiliated institutions. Education included training at Massachusetts General Hospital, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and Boston Children’s Hospital. Dr. Ball is a double fellowship-trained orthopedic spine surgeon. He received a pediatric spine fellowship at Boston Children’s Hospital and a second adult spine fellowship at UCLA. Dr. Ball offers minimally invasive spine care, and many procedures often may be performed on an outpatient basis in an ambulatory surgical center.
References
- Gadjradj PS, Fiani B, et al. Expanding indications of full endoscopic spine surgery. J Spine Surg. 2023 Sep 22;9(3):229-232. doi: 10.21037/jss-23-65. Epub 2023 Jun 27. PMID: 37841778; PMCID: PMC10570651.
- Kwon H, Park JY. The Role and Future of Endoscopic Spine Surgery: A Narrative Review. Neurospine. 2023 Mar;20(1):43-55. doi: 10.14245/ns.2346236.118. Epub 2023 Mar 31. PMID: 37016853; PMCID: PMC10080412.
At a Glance
Dr. Hieu Ball
- Double fellowship-trained orthopedic
- Orthopedic surgery residency at Harvard Medical School
- Over 20 years of spine surgery experience
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