News & Articles
Hope for Chronic Back Pain: Modern Non-Surgical Options Explained
Chronic back pain patients today have more non-surgical options than at any point in spine care's history. Targeted physical therapy, image-guided injections, radiofrequency ablation, and biologic disc repair fill the gap between conservative care and surgery — with candidacy evaluated individually.
9 Ways to Avoid Spinal Fusion: A Step-by-Step Patient Guide
Nine evidence-informed strategies may help patients avoid spinal fusion — from confirming the diagnosis to evaluating biologic disc repair. Outcomes vary by individual case.
New Approaches to Chronic Back Pain: What Patients Should Know
Modern spine care now offers a growing range of options between conservative therapy and surgery — from image-guided diagnostics to biologic disc repair. A structured clinical evaluation determines which approaches may be appropriate for each individual.
Stronger Evidence for Non-Surgical Spine Care: What the Research Shows
Published outcome data for non-surgical spine care — including intra-annular fibrin injection — has expanded over the past decade. Learn what the evidence shows, its limits, and how individual candidacy is evaluated at Valor Spine.
Desk Workers with Sciatica: Non-Surgical and Regenerative Treatment Options
Desk workers with disc-related sciatica have multiple care options — from ergonomic adjustments and physical therapy to intra-annular fibrin injection for annular tear repair. Learn how each approach works and how candidates are individually evaluated for non-surgical disc treatment.
Veterans After Failed Epidural Injections: When to Consider Biologic Disc Repair
Veterans who haven't gotten lasting relief from repeated epidural injections may have an unaddressed annular tear — a structural problem injections aren't designed to fix. Learn how biologic disc repair may help and how VA Mission Act Community Care may cover it.
The Cycle of Pain After Spine Surgery: When Regenerative Care May Help
Persistent pain after spine surgery may point to residual or adjacent annular tears the original procedure did not address. Learn how intra-annular fibrin injection may help break the cycle — and what candidacy evaluation involves.

