What is a Laminectomy?
A laminectomy is a type of spinal decompression surgery that removes a small portion of bone called the lamina. The lamina is the back part of each vertebra that forms a protective roof over your spinal canal. When this canal narrows due to arthritis, bone spurs, or thickened ligaments, it can pinch the nerves traveling to your legs or arms, causing intense aching and shooting pain.
Unlike more invasive procedures from decades ago, modern laminectomy techniques focus on precise decompression while preserving the stability of your spine. For patients with lumbar laminectomy, the procedure targets the lower back, while cervical laminectomy addresses issues originating in the neck.
Most patients who need a laminectomy have already spent months or even years trying to avoid an operation. At Spine Solutions, Dr. Myers will only recommend a laminectomy when nonsurgical options have failed and your quality of life is suffering. Our team of specialists in Hollywood, Boca Raton, and Coral Gables, FL, will guide you through every aspect of the process so you feel informed, supported, and respected on your path to relief.
What Spine Conditions Are Treated with a Laminectomy?
A laminectomy is most commonly performed to treat lumbar and cervical spinal stenosis, a gradual narrowing of the spinal canal that occurs as the spine ages.
Over time, ligaments thicken, discs bulge, and facet joints enlarge, squeezing the spinal cord and nerve roots. This compression often leads to a condition where walking becomes painful and difficult. Dr. Myers uses laminectomy surgery to reverse that compression and restore your mobility. Specific conditions treated with this procedure include:
- Spinal stenosis, or the narrowing of the spinal canal causing cramping, weakness, or heaviness in the legs with walking, or similar symptoms in the arms with neck extension.
- Herniated disc with bony compression, a disc rupture combined with arthritic bone spurs pressing directly on a nerve root.
- Ligamentum flavum hypertrophy, or the thickening of a spinal ligament that pushes into the spinal canal from behind.
Regardless of your condition, the goal is always the same: remove as little bone as necessary while achieving complete, lasting nerve decompression and pain relief.
Are You a Candidate for Laminectomy Surgery?
You may be a candidate for laminectomy surgery if you have tried conservative treatments for at least three to six months without adequate relief. These treatments typically include physical therapy, anti-inflammatory medications, epidural steroid injections, and activity modification.
Specific symptoms that often respond very well to a laminectomy surgery include pain, numbness, or weakness that follows a clear nerve pattern. For lumbar issues, that means symptoms that travel from your lower back into your buttocks, thighs, or calves. For cervical issues, symptoms travel from your neck into your shoulder, arm, or hand.
If your symptoms continue to interfere with basic daily tasks like walking to the mailbox, preparing meals, or dressing yourself, surgical decompression with laminectomy surgery becomes a reasonable next step. Our team in one of our Miami-area spine clinics will review your overall health, bone quality, and any previous spine surgeries to ensure you are a safe candidate for the procedure.
Our Approach to Laminectomy Surgery in Miami & South Florida
At Spine Solutions, Dr. Myers performs laminectomy surgery using a minimally invasive approach whenever possible. This technique reduces blood loss, lowers the risk of infection, and allows patients to go home faster than with typical back surgery.
What sets our practice apart is the high standard of patient-first care you receive from your initial phone call through your final follow-up visit. For patients across Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties, Spine Solutions delivers expert laminectomy surgery close to home, backed by a team that genuinely cares about your long-term success.
Request your appointment today to speak with our team of spine experts in Hollywood, Boca Raton, and Coral Gables and find the relief you deserve from your pain.
Frequently Asked Questions about Laminectomy
Will my spinal stenosis return after a laminectomy?
While a laminectomy effectively removes the bone and tissue causing nerve compression, it does not stop the natural aging process of the spine. Some patients may develop new symptoms years later due to continued degeneration or scar tissue formation. Dr. Myers will discuss your long-term outlook openly and provide strategies to protect your spine health for years to come.