Vertrae® 360

Kamal Woods

We take you behind the scenes of a neurosurgery private practice and talk all things spine-related.

  1. Why Standard Physical Therapy Fails Lumbar Instability | Vertrae® 360 Short Deep Dive

    -1 дн.

    Why Standard Physical Therapy Fails Lumbar Instability | Vertrae® 360 Short Deep Dive

    Why does physical therapy sometimes fail for lumbar instability — even when you do the exercises, show up consistently, and put in the work? In this Vertrae® 360 Short Deep Dive, we explain why lumbar instability is not always a simple “weak core” problem. Standard physical therapy often focuses on general strengthening, but instability usually requires a more specific approach that targets the deep stabilizing muscles of the spine, especially the multifidus and transversus abdominis. You’ll learn why traditional core exercises like crunches, planks, or generic back-strengthening routines may not fully restore spinal control when the multifidus has become inhibited by chronic pain or injury. We also discuss why stability-directed therapy must focus on timing, coordination, endurance, and neuromuscular control — not just strength. For some patients, the deep stabilizing system does not respond enough to voluntary exercise alone. In those cases, options like ReActiv8® restorative neurostimulation may be considered to help activate and retrain the multifidus muscle. When structural instability is more advanced, additional treatments may be needed. At Vertrae® in Dayton, Ohio, Dr. Kamal Woods evaluates lumbar instability by looking at symptoms, imaging, movement patterns, function, and patient goals to determine which treatment path makes the most sense. Visit Vertrae.com to request your MotionFirst™ evaluation.

    6 мин.
  2. Treating Lumbar Instability: Every Option Explained | Vertrae® 360 (Ep. 46)

    -1 дн.

    Treating Lumbar Instability: Every Option Explained | Vertrae® 360 (Ep. 46)

    If you’ve been diagnosed with lumbar instability and you’ve already tried physical therapy, injections, or other treatments without lasting relief, it can feel overwhelming when surgery enters the conversation. In this episode, we break down the full treatment spectrum for lumbar instability — from stability-directed physical therapy to ReActiv8® restorative neurostimulation, basivertebral nerve ablation, injections, and minimally invasive fusion surgery. You’ll learn why treatment should follow the patient, not just the MRI, and why two people with similar imaging may need very different care plans. We explain why standard core exercises may not fully address lumbar instability, especially when the deep stabilizing muscles like the multifidus and transversus abdominis are inhibited or underactive. We also discuss how ReActiv8® may help selected patients retrain the multifidus muscle, how BVNA targets vertebrogenic pain from Modic changes, and how injections can support the treatment plan without “fixing” instability itself. When a structural problem is advanced — such as significant spondylolisthesis, nerve compression, or progressive weakness — minimally invasive stabilization may become the right conversation. This episode explains MIS-TLIF, how it differs from traditional open fusion, and how robotic guidance with the Mazor X™ system helps support precision in modern spine surgery. At Vertrae® in Dayton, Ohio, Dr. Kamal Woods evaluates each patient personally, using a full-spectrum approach that considers symptoms, imaging, function, lifestyle, goals, and anatomy before recommending a path forward. Visit Vertrae.com to request your MotionFirst™ evaluation.

    20 мин.
  3. Why Your Back Suddenly Gives Out: Lumbar Instability Explained | Vertrae® 360 Short Deep Dive

    -3 дн.

    Why Your Back Suddenly Gives Out: Lumbar Instability Explained | Vertrae® 360 Short Deep Dive

    Why does your back suddenly “give out” during simple movements like standing up, bending, reaching, or getting out of a car? In this Vertrae® 360 Short Deep Dive, we explain how lumbar instability can cause unpredictable mechanical low back pain, sharp catching sensations, and the feeling that your spine cannot be trusted. Unlike a sore muscle or a classic herniated disc, lumbar instability is often a movement-based problem. It can happen when one spinal segment moves more than it should during everyday transitions. You’ll learn how the spine’s stabilizing structures — including the intervertebral discs, facet joints, ligaments, and multifidus muscle — work together to control movement. When these systems weaken or fail, even small motions can trigger sudden pain, slipping, locking, or guarding. This episode also explains why standard MRI or X-rays may not always capture lumbar instability, why flexion-extension X-rays and clinical evaluation matter, and how treatment may range from targeted stability-focused physical therapy to ReActiv8® restorative neurostimulation or minimally invasive spine surgery when structural instability is advanced. At Vertrae® in Dayton, Ohio, Dr. Kamal Woods evaluates chronic mechanical low back pain using a MotionFirst™ approach that looks at symptoms, movement patterns, imaging, biomechanics, and patient goals. Visit Vertrae.com to request your MotionFirst™ evaluation.

    5 мин.
  4. Lumbar Instability: Why Your Spine’s Unpredictability Is the Diagnosis | Vertrae® 360 (Ep. 45)

    -3 дн.

    Lumbar Instability: Why Your Spine’s Unpredictability Is the Diagnosis | Vertrae® 360 (Ep. 45)

    If your chronic low back pain feels unpredictable — sharp one moment, quiet the next — and your back seems to “give out” during simple movements like standing up, bending, reaching, or getting out of a car, this episode is for you. In this Vertrae® 360 Deep Dive, we explore lumbar instability, also called lumbar segmental instability. Unlike a simple sore muscle or a classic herniated disc, lumbar instability is often a movement problem. It can happen when the spine loses precise control over the small motions between vertebrae, creating sudden catching pain, slipping sensations, guarding, and fear of movement. You’ll learn how the spine’s stabilizing structures work together, including the intervertebral discs, facet joints, ligaments, and multifidus muscle. We also break down the Kirkaldy-Willis degenerative cascade, explaining how disc degeneration, facet joint stress, ligament laxity, and multifidus inhibition can contribute to mechanical low back pain over time. This episode also explains why lumbar instability can be hard to diagnose on standard MRI or X-ray. Because the problem is dynamic, flexion-extension X-rays are often an important first step, but pain-related guarding can sometimes limit what the imaging shows. We discuss how physicians may use additional clues from MRI, CT, sitting X-rays, facet fluid, disc height loss, and alignment changes to understand the full mechanical picture. Treatment depends on the true pain generator. For some patients, targeted multifidus training and stability-focused physical therapy may help restore control. For others, ReActiv8® restorative neurostimulation may be considered to help activate the deep stabilizing multifidus muscle. When instability is advanced or structural failure is severe, minimally invasive fusion approaches such as robotic MIS-TLIF may be part of the conversation. At Vertrae® in Dayton, Ohio, Dr. Kamal Woods evaluates chronic mechanical low back pain with a MotionFirst™ approach, looking at symptoms, movement patterns, imaging, biomechanics, anatomy, and patient goals before recommending a treatment path. Visit Vertrae.com to request your MotionFirst™ evaluation.

    19 мин.
  5. PRP for Spine: What to Expect, What It Costs, and When It’s Worth It | Vertrae® 360 (Ep. 44)

    -6 дн.

    PRP for Spine: What to Expect, What It Costs, and When It’s Worth It | Vertrae® 360 (Ep. 44)

    If you are considering platelet-rich plasma, or PRP, for a spine condition, you may already know there is clinical evidence behind PRP for certain types of back pain. But what does the process actually look like in real life? In this episode, we walk through the PRP patient experience step by step — from the initial evaluation to procedure day, recovery expectations, medication restrictions, cost, and timeline for results. You’ll learn why the PRP journey should begin with diagnosis, not an injection, and why patient selection is one of the most important factors in determining whether PRP is a reasonable option. We explain how PRP is made from your own blood, how a centrifuge concentrates the platelet-rich layer, and why live imaging guidance such as fluoroscopy is essential for safe and precise placement in spine care. You’ll also learn why PRP is not the same as a steroid injection, why NSAIDs like ibuprofen and naproxen are often avoided after treatment, and why meaningful improvement is typically measured over months rather than days. This episode also covers the financial reality of PRP, including why most spine-related PRP procedures are usually paid out of pocket, and how to think about cost in the context of long-term relief, motion preservation, and potential alternatives such as surgery. We also discuss when PRP may not be the right tool — including severe nerve compression, progressive neurological symptoms, structural instability, or end-stage disc degeneration — and why timing matters in regenerative spine care. At Vertrae® in Dayton, Ohio, Dr. Kamal Woods personally evaluates each patient to determine whether PRP, another non-surgical option, or surgery is the most appropriate path forward. Visit Vertrae.com to request your MotionFirst™ evaluation.

    18 мин.

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We take you behind the scenes of a neurosurgery private practice and talk all things spine-related.

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