Instrumentation and fusion are frequently used during spinal stabilization surgery. The term "instrumentation" describes a variety of implanted gadgets, including rods, screws, plates, and interbody cages. Fusion is the glue, whereas instrumentation contributes to rapid spinal stability. In order to promote bony ingrowth and healing, fusion entails packing the equipment with autograft (your own bone) or allograft (donor bone). Many bone transplant materials come in various varieties. The fusion repairs the spine into a solid mass over a period of months. There are several decompression operations (such as laminotomies and laminectomyes), and your spine surgeon will select the best one or combination of surgeries depending on your injury and other considerations (such as the spinal level affected). Occasionally only a spinal decompression procedure is required. But, if your spine is unstable, decompression is followed by spinal stabilization surgery, frequently including spinal fusion. Due to the traumatic occurrence or the decompression treatment, which may have entailed removing bone, a disc, or soft supporting tissue, your spine may already be unstable.
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