Lumbar fusion permanently joins lumbar vertebrae using hardware. Fibrin disc treatment seals annular tears in lumbar discs with FDA-approved fibrin sealant under fluoroscopic guidance. The two procedures address different anatomic problems. Imaging plus history determines which fits a specific patient with chronic lumbar pain.

Key Takeaways

  • Lumbar fusion stabilizes; fibrin treatment seals tears.
  • Recovery: months for fusion, weeks for fibrin treatment.
  • Fusion eliminates motion at the segment.
  • Fibrin treatment preserves motion.
  • Each fits different lumbar lesion patterns.

What This Guide Covers

  1. How do the mechanisms differ?
  2. How do recoveries differ?
  3. How do outcomes differ?
  4. When does each fit?

How do the mechanisms differ?

Fusion uses hardware and bone graft to permanently join lumbar vertebrae, eliminating motion at the segment. Fibrin treatment delivers a sealant into the annular tear, scaffolding tissue healing without altering segment structure.

How do recoveries differ?

Fusion recovery runs months — bone fusion and consolidation are the rate limiter. Fibrin treatment recovery runs weeks for normal activity, with disc healing continuing 3 to 6 months at the tissue level.

How do outcomes differ?

Fusion has a documented 40% failure rate (FBSS) in the literature. The fibrin procedure has shown an 83% long-term success rate in published cohorts. Outcomes depend on the match between intervention and lesion.

When does each fit?

Fusion fits structural problems requiring stabilization. Fibrin treatment fits annular tears in viable lumbar discs. Imaging review determines which a specific patient is closer to.

Clinical Note

Lumbar pain is the most common reason patients arrive at our clinic, and the fusion-vs-fibrin question comes up in most consultations. Our clinical staff treats it as an imaging question rather than a preference question. When the lumbar imaging shows clear instability or end-stage degeneration, we recommend surgical consultation. When the imaging shows annular tears in viable discs, the fibrin procedure is on the table. The Valor team supports whichever path the imaging fits.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I have fibrin treatment if fusion has been recommended?

A second-opinion review is reasonable. Many patients find a non-surgical option fits.

Does fibrin treatment work for multi-level lumbar pain?

Yes, in many cases. Multiple levels can be treated in a single session when imaging supports it.

Which has better long-term durability?

Both have durability data. Match between intervention and lesion drives outcomes.

This content is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. It is not a substitute for evaluation by a qualified physician. Treatment decisions depend on your individual medical history and clinical findings. Schedule a consultation to discuss whether the procedure is right for you.

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Disclaimer: This content is provided for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice; it is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any condition and should not be used as a substitute for professional medical evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment, and you should always consult a qualified healthcare provider regarding any questions about your health or a medical condition, as reading this content does not create a doctor-patient relationship. Some articles on this site may have been created with the use of generative AI tools and include hypothetical patient stories, examples, and scenarios created to illustrate conditions, treatment approaches, and the kinds of situations Valor Spine works with, and may contain errors or omissions; these scenarios are composite or fictionalized and do not depict any actual patient, and any names, ages, occupations, locations, and circumstances are illustrative only, with any resemblance to a real individual being coincidental, and no protected patient health information is used in these examples. Individual conditions and results vary, no specific outcome is guaranteed, and a clinical evaluation is the only way to determine whether a particular treatment is appropriate for you.