Automated percutaneous mechanical lumbar discectomy

 
Guidance issued
 
IPG Number: IPG141

Summary

The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) has issued full guidance to the NHS in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland on automated percutaneous mechanical lumbar discectomy.

As part of the NICE's work programme, the current guidance was considered for review in July 2009 but did not meet the review criteria as set out in the IP process guide. The guidance below therefore remains current.

Description

Lumbar radicular pain, also known as sciatica, refers to pain that begins in the lower back and radiates down one of the legs. It is commonly caused by a herniated (or prolapsed) lumbar intervertebral disc. The herniation is a result of a protrusion of the nucleus pulposus through a tear in the surrounding annulus fibrosus. The annulus fibrosus may rupture completely resulting in an extruded disc, or may remain intact but stretched resulting in a contained disc prolapse. This may then compress one or more nerve roots, resulting in pain, numbness or weakness in the leg.

Conservative treatments include the use of analgesics, non steroidal anti-inflammatory medicines, physical therapy and hot or cold compresses. Epidural injections of corticosteroid may also be used. Surgery to remove disc material is considered if there is nerve compression or persistent symptoms that are unresponsive to conservative treatment.

Surgical techniques include open repair procedures and minimally invasive alternatives using percutaneous approaches.

Automated percutaneous mechanical lumbar discectomy is performed using local anaesthetic with or without conscious sedation. Under fluoroscopic guidance, a cannula is placed centrally within the disc using a posterolateral approach on the symptomatic side. A probe connected to an automated cutting and aspiration device is then introduced through the cannula. The disc is aspirated until no more nuclear material can be obtained.

There are a number of different devices available that are used to perform this procedure.

OPCS4.6 Code(s):

V58.3 Primary automated percutaneous mechanical excision of lumbar intervertebral disc V55.- Levels of spine

Y53.4 Approach to organ under fluoroscopic control

or

V59.3 Revisional automated percutaneous mechanical excision of lumbar intervertebral disc

V55.- Levels of spine

Y53.4 Approach to organ under fluoroscopic control

Note: Codes within category V55.-  are assigned in second place each time a spinal operation is coded: if the levels of spine are not specified, V55.9 Unspecified levels of spine is used.

 

The NHS Classifications Service of NHS Connecting for Health is the central definitive source for clinical coding guidance and determines the coding standards associated with the classifications (OPCS-4 and ICD-10) to be used across the NHS.   The NHS Classifications Service and NICE work collaboratively to ensure the most appropriate classification codes are provided.  www.connectingforhealth.co.uk/clinicalcoding

 

Details

Arrangement:
Special
Topic area:
Musculoskeletal
Specialty:
Trauma and orthopaedic surgery
Specialist advice sought from:

Society of British Neurological Surgeons

British Orthopaedic Association

British Cervical Spine Society

The Pain Society

British Society of Skeletal Radiologists

British Association of Spinal Surgeons

Date notified to NICE:
27 July 2004
Provisional consultation date:
June 2005
Guidance issue date:
23 November 2005

Contact details:

Contact NICE about this project
Technical lead
(for procedure specific enquiries or comments)
Helen Gallo
ip@nice.org.uk
Contact Address:

Interventional Procedures Programme
National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence
MidCity Place
71 High Holborn
London
WC1V 6NA

Links:

This page was last updated: 04 April 2011

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Accessibility | Cymraeg | Freedom of information | Vision Impaired | Contact Us | Glossary | Data protection | Copyright | Disclaimer | Terms and conditions

Copyright @ 2012 National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence. All rights reserved.