Electrical bone growth stimulators are a supplemental form of therapy to help enhance the body’s bone healing process … a process that is absolutely essential for the success of any type of spinal fusion surgery.
Human bone is actually a living tissue and, like skin, has the inherent ability to heal itself when broken or injured. Broken bone helps promote the body’s bone healing process by creating its own electrical field. In the same way, application of an electrical stimulator can enhance the body’s natural bone healing process.
In the case of a spinal fusion, it is necessary for multiple bone fragments to heal together, or “fuse”, to create one solid bone. A fusion does not occur immediately at the time of surgery, but rather it is a process that occurs over time.
During surgery, the surgeon lays down bone fragments (usually taken from iliac crest in the patient’s hip) in the segment of the spine to be fused.
After the surgery, a process called “osteogenesis” starts, which is the body’s way of growing bony tissue.
Over time (a few months and up to one year), this bone growth process most often unites the bone graft pieces into a solid union of bone.
The fusion of these bone fragments stops the motion in the affected segment of the spine, and thereby eliminates or reduces the pain that was created by the motion.
Patients who have had a previously failed spine fusion
Patients who are having a multi-level spinal fusion
Patients who smoke
Patients with a diagnosis of Grade III (or worse) spondylolisthesis
Additional factors that may lessen the chance of obtaining a solid fusion include: osteoporosis, vascular disease, obesity, diabetes, renal disease, alcoholism, and medications that deplete calcium.
Bone stimulators can either be implanted under the skin (internal) or worn on the outside of the skin (external):