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Answers about Controversial Trends in Spine Care

Spine Health | Last Active: Jan 16, 2023 | Replies (35)

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@jenniferhunter

@cbove2 Thanks for sharing the information. I searched for it and found it in Becker's Spine Review and they do deserve credit for their copyrighted information.

Becker's Spine Review policies on reproducing their material can be found at this link:
https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/linking-and-reprinting-policy.html

In compliance with Becker's policies, the correct way to share the information is to share their link to the original article, the title of the article, and to put quotes around the text you have copied and pasted, and only quote the first paragraph.

Mayo Connect also asks that material is properly credited with a link to the original article because that respects the copyright on the information.

The Connect Community Guidelines state the following about copyrighted material:

No copyrighted postings.
Do not post copyrighted information. Copyrighted material (text or images), private email text and other privileged information may not be posted without prior written permission from the original author.
Acknowledge the original source when quoting content from elsewhere.

Please do share material that is relevant to the discussion and respect the owner's rights.

The article in Becker's Spine Review may be found at this link: https://www.beckersspine.com/spine/item/52499-california-neurosurgeon-reverses-3-level-cervical-fusion-with-artificial-discs.html

My comments regarding the article on Dr. Lanman and his procedure are:

This is an example of a doctor owned surgical facility that is marketing their targeted services in a wealthy area. To be fair, patients should also get other opinions elsewhere because their doctors may be biased because it is a surgery center for profit. They may not be interested in complex cases that don't fit their interests. There will still be risks involving their surgery, and this is a procedure that they want to do as a re-operation for spine surgery patients. They will need to saw through a fused area to insert an artificial disc into it and make sure that they don't damage the spinal cord in doing that. Patients need to advocate for their own best interests and understand the benefits as well as the risks. Artificial discs can also fail, and the body can have an immune response to foreign materials in the implant, and bone growth can occur around the artificial disc in an attempt to stabilize the motion. There really isn't a one procedure that is best for all patients and patients need to learn about different procedures that can address the problem before making a decision.

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Replies to "@cbove2 Thanks for sharing the information. I searched for it and found it in Becker's Spine..."

Thank you, Jennifer, for your diligence on copyright.

@cbove2, I appreciate your posting the article that you found. I have inserted the link to the article, which you had cited by title and author as per the community guidelines on Mayo Clinic Connect. Thank you. Now the post also complies with the wishes or the source author.

CBowe, I love that you remain the optimist, pragmatist, who is data-driven and that you continue to research what might work for you. As Jennifer says, there isn't one procedure that works for everyone. What treatments seems to be the most promising for you?