Army veterans facing spinal fusion recommendations may have non-surgical alternatives under the Mission Act. Intra-annular fibrin injection seals annular tears with an FDA-approved fibrin sealant — outpatient and hardware-free.

Key Takeaways

  • About 65.6% of veterans report recent pain.
  • Most disc pain has paths that don’t require fusion.
  • Spinal fusion has roughly a 40% failure rate.
  • Mission Act may cover community-care regenerative options.
  • Valor handles VA paperwork directly.

Why Army Veterans Develop Disc Problems

Years of training loads, equipment weight, and accumulated micro-trauma drive earlier disc degeneration.

What Are the Non-Surgical Options?

  • Continued conservative care.
  • Image-guided injections.
  • Behavioral pain programs.
  • Microdiscectomy for nerve compression.
  • Intra-annular fibrin injection.

How Mission Act Applies

Eligible veterans may access community-care regenerative options when criteria are met.

Clinical Note

Army veterans the Valor team meets often arrive with a fusion already on the calendar.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I confirm Mission Act eligibility?

Valor’s staff helps confirm.

Will my VA primary care doctor handle the referral?

Often yes.

What if I have already had spine surgery?

Many veterans with prior surgery remain candidates.

How long does paperwork take?

Timelines vary by VISN.

Sources & Further Reading

  • VA — Mission Act
  • VA — National Pain Management Strategy
  • NIH — Disc pathology
  • CDC — Pain in adults

Medical disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes and does not replace medical advice. Consult your physician about any condition or treatment decision.

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