Lumbar disc prolapse
A disc in the lower back that has herniated and is pressing on a nerve root. Selected cases may be suitable for endoscopic discectomy to relieve nerve compression.
Endoscopic spine surgery is a minimally invasive approach that uses a small incision and camera system to treat selected spine conditions. It may be considered for suitable patients with lumbar disc prolapse, sciatica, spinal stenosis, or nerve compression.
Not every spine condition is suitable for an endoscopic approach. The decision depends on symptoms, neurological examination, MRI findings, spinal anatomy, and clinical risk.
For non-emergency appointments only. The clinic team will reply to confirm availability.
This page explains endoscopic spine surgery and when neurosurgical assessment may be appropriate for spine conditions.
Patients or family members seeking general information before a non-emergency spine surgery consultation.
Request specialist assessment if spine symptoms persist, worsen, affect walking or limb function, or if MRI findings need clinical interpretation.
Sudden weakness, loss of bladder or bowel control, saddle numbness, or rapidly worsening limb weakness — attend the nearest Emergency Department immediately.
Endoscopic spine surgery uses a small skin incision and a specialised camera system called an endoscope to access the spine. This allows the surgeon to treat certain types of nerve compression or disc problems with reduced disruption to surrounding muscles and soft tissue.
In conventional open surgery, a longer incision is made and muscles are retracted to expose the spine. Endoscopic surgery uses a much smaller access point with a camera and specialised instruments. In appropriate cases, this may be associated with reduced blood loss, shorter hospital stay, and faster return to daily activities.
Endoscopic techniques are not universally applicable. Certain conditions — including multi-level disease, spinal instability, scoliosis, or cases requiring spinal fusion — may require open surgery or alternative approaches. Suitability can only be determined after clinical consultation and MRI review.
Endoscopic spine surgery may be one of the options discussed when a patient has a spine condition that has not responded to conservative treatment, where symptoms match MRI findings, and where anatomy is suitable for a minimally invasive approach.
Suitability for endoscopic spine surgery can only be determined after clinical consultation and imaging review.
A disc in the lower back that has herniated and is pressing on a nerve root. Selected cases may be suitable for endoscopic discectomy to relieve nerve compression.
Nerve pain radiating from the lower back or buttock into the leg. When caused by a disc or bony compression, endoscopic decompression may be considered in appropriate patients.
Narrowing of the spinal canal in the lower back causing leg pain, heaviness, or walking difficulty. Selected cases may benefit from endoscopic decompression.
A disc in the neck that is pressing on a nerve root or the spinal cord. Surgical approach depends on the level involved and clinical presentation.
Narrowing of the nerve exit channel in the spine. May be amenable to endoscopic decompression in suitable patients.
Recurrence of disc prolapse after previous surgery. Assessment is needed to determine the most appropriate surgical approach based on anatomy and clinical findings.
Not all spine conditions are best treated endoscopically. The surgical approach is decided based on the clinical situation and imaging findings, not patient preference alone.
When vertebrae are unstable or have slipped significantly (spondylolisthesis), fusion surgery may be required to stabilise the spine.
Complex deformity, multi-level stenosis, or conditions involving multiple spinal segments may require open surgical correction.
Significant compression of the spinal cord, particularly in the neck, may require open decompression to adequately relieve pressure.
Previous spine surgery may alter the anatomy in ways that make an endoscopic approach technically unsuitable.
Specialist assessment begins with a consultation — symptom history, neurological examination, and MRI review. The clinic team will confirm appointment availability after receiving your request.
For urgent spine symptoms including sudden weakness, bladder or bowel changes, or saddle numbness, attend the nearest Emergency Department immediately.
The following symptoms should not wait for a routine appointment. Attend the nearest Emergency Department immediately.
The information on this page is provided for general patient education only. It does not replace medical consultation, clinical examination, imaging review, diagnosis, or emergency medical care. Treatment decisions should be made after proper assessment by a qualified medical professional. For urgent neurological symptoms, please attend the nearest Emergency Department immediately.