@upstatephil Hello and I want to welcome you to Connect! The good news about having lower cervical levels fused is that you should be able to turn your head with a lesser degree of compromise. Most of head turning is C1 & C2, with a little help from C3 & C4.
I don't think your surgery will be more complicated, it will just take a little longer to do 3 levels. Removing and replacing discs with cages or bone spacers is a pretty standard procedure, and the surgeon may seed the fusion with bone spurs that are removed during surgery. Do you have compression of spinal nerves in the foramen at those levels? That would add a bit more work if the foramen need to be cleared of arthritic bone.
Did your surgeon show you the imaging and explain why 3 levels need to be decompressed? They should justify the need. Sometimes an adjacent disc isn't perfect, and they add that into a planned surgery for another level which gives them a bigger insurance payment. I hope that isn't the case, but I have heard of this with another patient. She questioned him on the extra level he was adding, and he backed off and only fused one level. With fusions, the extra stress on the neck afterward can cause a domino effect that makes other levels go bad, so "less is more" is better, or a more conservative approach if a fusion isn't really needed at an adjacent level.
My fusion was C5/C6 done at Mayo and the recovery from that wasn't too bad. It took about 3 months to heal and for the fusion to solidify. The incision heals in about 6 weeks. I was in a neck brace all of that time because I opted for no hardware, and stayed immobile until fused. After that I had to rehab with physical therapy to get strength back. I didn't do well on pain meds after surgery, so I didn't take any. I found that I could handle the healing pain OK without drugs and avoided constipation from pain meds that away. I just rested and slept a lot. The nerve pain caused by the spine problem was gone when I woke up from anesthesia, and I just had the pain from the surgical path. My surgery was done before permanent damage had occurred from spinal cord compression. I didn't have compression of nerves at the spinal nerve roots.
Hopefully some other members will join the conversation. Good luck with your surgery!
Jennifer
@jenniferhunter who may I ask did your surgery at Mayo?