Veterans told they need spinal fusion often have non-surgical alternatives — including intra-annular fibrin injection, which seals annular tears with an FDA-approved fibrin sealant. The Mission Act may cover community care for eligible veterans, and Valor handles VA paperwork directly.

Key Takeaways

  • About 65.6% of veterans report recent pain.
  • Most disc-related 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 Veterans Often Face Fusion Recommendations

Many veterans have years of conservative care that has not held. When standard pathways stall, surgical referral often follows. The non-surgical regenerative option — when applicable — sometimes is not presented.

What Are the Non-Surgical Options?

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

How Does Mission Act Apply?

Eligible veterans may access community-care regenerative options when distance and wait-time criteria are met. Valor confirms eligibility during consultation and handles paperwork directly.

Clinical Note

Veterans the Valor team meets often have years of pain alongside a fusion recommendation. Our clinical staff evaluates whether an annular tear is the actual cause and whether sealing it is appropriate before any surgical decision is finalized.

What Recovery Looks Like

Most veterans walk out the same day. Activity returns gradually over weeks. Reported VAS scores improved from 72.4mm baseline to 33.0mm at 104 weeks; individual outcomes vary.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I confirm Mission Act eligibility?

Valor’s staff helps confirm during consultation.

Will my VA primary care doctor handle the referral?

Often yes. Valor liaises directly with VA case managers when needed.

What if I have already had spine surgery?

Many veterans with prior surgery remain candidates.

How long does paperwork take?

Timelines vary by VISN. Valor manages throughout.

Sources & Further Reading

  • VA — Mission Act community care
  • VA — National Pain Management Strategy
  • NIH — Disc pathology
  • CDC — Pain prevalence

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

Schedule a consultation with the Valor team to discuss eligibility and next steps.

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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.