Dr. Albert P. Wong

Lumbar Spinal Fusion Surgery Services in Los Angeles

If back pain is keeping you from the things you love, day after day, don’t let it control your life. Lumbar spinal fusion surgery can make your spine stable and ready to move the way it used to, before the pain took over. Stop working around it. Start working again.

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Understanding Lumbar Spinal Fusion Surgery

During the process of a Lumbar spinal fusion surgery, surgeons join vertebrae into one solid piece of bone. Once they fuse, that part of the spine no longer moves. The surgeon clears out damaged disc material first, then packs in bone graft and hardware to lock things down. Lower back fusion surgery and lumbar stabilization surgery are the same procedure; it is just a different name.

Common Lumbar Fusion Levels

Most lumbar spinal fusions happen at the two lowest spine levels, L4-L5 and L5-S1. These segments carry the most weight and the most motion. That is why they wear out first. L4-L5 and L5-S1 absorb the bulk of daily bending, twisting, and lifting, making them the most common sites for degeneration and instability. This kind of lower spine surgery addresses the levels that do the heaviest daily work.

Types of Lumbar Fusion Procedures

Lumbar spine fusion procedure options vary among surgeons on how they reach the spine. For example, it can be from the back, front, or side. Each spinal lumbar fusion approach offers different quid pro quos in recovery time, nerve risk, and surgical complexity. Six approaches are most common today.

PLF (Posterolateral Fusion)

Surgeons pack bone graft along the gutters beside the spine, over the transverse processes, skipping the disc entirely. Pedicle screws and rods usually reinforce the graft, since transverse process bone heals slowly on its own.

PLIF (Posterior Lumbar Interbody Fusion)

Surgeons approach from the back, remove the disc, and retract the thecal sac and nerve roots to reach it. This wider exposure carries a higher chance of nerve irritation or a dural tear than newer approaches.

TLIF (Transforaminal Lumbar Interbody Fusion)

Surgeons remove one facet joint and enter through the foramen, reaching the disc from a steeper angle. Nerve roots need little to no retraction here, which lowers the risk of injury compared with PLIF.

ALIF (Anterior Lumbar Interbody Fusion)

Surgeons reach the disc through the abdomen, a retroperitoneal route that bypasses the back muscles and nerves completely. The open view allows a larger graft and better disc height correction, though major vessels sit close by.

LLIF (Lateral Lumbar Interbody Fusion)

Surgeons come in from the side, splitting through the psoas to reach the spine. Back muscles stay clear. The lumbar plexus does not, so neuromonitoring tracks it. At L5-S1, the iliac crest blocks this route entirely.

OLIF (Oblique Lumbar Interbody Fusion)

Surgeons pass in front of the psoas instead of through it. That alone keeps the lumbar plexus safe. Major vessels run close to this path, so surgeons still need to work carefully. Unlike LLIF, this route can reach L5-S1.

Benefits of Lumbar Spinal Fusion Surgery

Lumbar spinal fusion not only stops pain, but it also joins damaged vertebrae, ending the abnormal motion that wears down discs and irritates nearby nerves. It offers real stability, not a vague promise. Ten-year studies show the pain relief and improved function mostly hold up over time. Real results, lasting function.

Lasting Pain Relief

Chronic back pain chips away at daily life over time. Sleep suffers, work becomes harder, and relationships feel the strain because pain that never lets up affects everything.

Fusion removes the source. Not the symptom. Surgery eliminates the actual unstable motion causing the pain, not just masks it with another round of medication.

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Restored Spinal Stability

An unstable spine moves where it shouldn’t. Vertebrae shift, grind, and irritate nearby nerves. Every step, every twist becomes a small risk you can’t always predict in advance.

Fusion locks that segment in place. Permanently. No more guessing whether a normal daily movement, bending down, reaching up, will trigger another flare-up.

Protection Against Further Nerve Damage

Untreated instability doesn’t stay still. It progresses quietly for years. Nerve compression that starts as occasional tingling can become permanent numbness or genuine weakness if nothing changes.

Fusion interrupts that progression early, before permanent damage sets in. Stopping the underlying motion protects nerve roots from continued, repeated irritation.

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Return to Daily Activity and Function

Pain changes what people do, quietly, over time. Skipped walks, avoided stairs, declined invitations, the list grows month after month of chronic discomfort.

A successful fusion reverses that retreat. Patients get back to work, hobbies, family activities, the version of life that pain had slowly taken away from them.

Lumbar Spinal Fusion Surgery Recovery

Lumbar spinal fusion surgery does not heal overnight. Patients typically stand and take short, supported steps within a day of surgery. Physical therapy follows over the next several weeks, rebuilding strength and movement. The bone itself continues solidifying for months afterward, well after patients have returned to most daily activities. Lumbar spinal fusion recovery time varies by patient, but each stage follows a predictable order.

01

Hospital Stay (Day 0 to 1-4 days)

Staff monitors vitals and pain through the first night. Most patients stand and take assisted steps within 24 to 48 hours. The hospital stay itself usually runs from one to four days before discharge.

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02

Early Home Recovery (Weeks 1-4)

Bending and twisting stay off limits for these four weeks. Lifting anything over ten pounds does too. Walking in short stretches, several times a day, keeps circulation moving while the incision and spine start to heal.

03

Transition & Formal Physical Therapy (Weeks 6-12)

Outpatient therapy usually starts around week six, once the surgeon confirms the bone is healing as expected. Sessions run through week twelve, built around core strengthening and a steadily increasing walking program.

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04

Strengthening & Functional Phase (Months 3-6)

Between months three and six, therapy shifts toward real tasks. Lifting and bending return to the routine. So does work, eased back in rather than resumed all at once. Walking itself starts to look ordinary again, without the careful gait from earlier months.

05

Bone Fusion Consolidation (Months 6-12)

From month six through month twelve, the bone graft matures into a solid mass. Patients usually feel better long before this stage finishes. The fusion itself still needs that full window to become biologically solid, not just symptom-free.

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06

Long-Term Maintenance & Final Confirmation (12+ Months)

Imaging near the one-year mark confirms whether the fusion is solid. After that, the work shifts to maintenance: good posture, careful lifting habits. Low-impact fitness matters too, since it protects the fused segment without overloading the levels next to it.

Why Patients Choose Our Care

Patients from different places travel to us because we have experience, technology, and our team gives genuine care that matters more than distance. That is why, when your back is at stake, choosing the right lumbar spine surgeon is necessary.

Experienced, Board-Certified Expertise

A board-certified spine surgeon with decades of experience brings judgment that training alone can't replicate. Complex cases, multiple fused levels, and revision surgeries call for that depth of hands-on skill.

Minimally Invasive and Robotic Technology

Smaller incisions and robotic-assisted precision mean less blood loss, shorter hospital stays, and a faster return to daily life compared to traditional open surgery techniques used in the past.

Personalized, Patient-First Care

No two spines or patients are identical, and no two recovery paths look the same. Your surgical team builds treatment plans around your specific condition, goals, and lifestyle, not a generic checklist.

Lumbar Spinal Fusion Surgery Serving Los Angeles & Nearby Areas

Patients travel to Wong Spine from throughout Los Angeles and neighboring communities for lumbar spinal fusion surgery and advanced lower back care. Dr. Albert Wong performs lumbar spinal fusion using robotic-assisted, minimally invasive techniques focused on stability, function, and long-term recovery outcomes.

Beverly Hills

Beverly Hills

Beverly Hills

Beverly Hills

Beverly Hills

Beverly Hills

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Beverly Hills

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Beverly Hills

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What our patients says

Patients consistently mention two things: how thoroughly their concerns were addressed, and how supported they felt throughout recovery.

Frequently Asked Questions

Lumbar spinal fusion raises a lot of questions before surgery. Here are direct answers to the questions patients ask most about cost, procedure, recovery, and long-term results.

 Lumbar spinal fusion joins two or more vertebrae into one solid bone using a graft and hardware. Billing differs by diagnosis, so the icd 10 spinal fusion lumbar code varies.

The surgeon removes damaged tissue, places a bone graft between the vertebrae, then secures it with screws and rods. New bone grows across the gap over several months.

Anterior lumbar interbody fusion, or ALIF, reaches the spine through the abdomen, not the back. Spinal muscles and nerve roots stay untouched, leaving room for a larger bone graft.

 Transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion, or TLIF, angles in through the foramen instead of straight from behind. Only one nerve root moves aside, which lowers the risk of nerve injury.

 Initial healing takes six to twelve weeks. Solid bone fusion takes six to twelve months. Most patients feel much better within the first few months, even as deeper healing continues.

Once the bone fully fuses, the vertebrae become one solid piece, permanently. Hardware rarely needs removal. Stress can shift to nearby segments, which your surgeon monitors at follow-up visits.

Reported success rates run from about 65% to 95%, depending on technique and how studies define success: imaging-confirmed fusion or simply less pain. Ask your surgeon.

Costs range from $50,000 to $150,000, based on complexity and insurance. Workplace injuries may involve a settlement or workers' comp claim alongside care. Ask your insurance team or attorney.

Expect pain and stiffness at first, with movement feeling limited for a while. Your care team helps you walk safely and manages pain along the way. Recovery improves gradually.

Schedule a Consultation for Lumbar Spinal Fusion Surgery

Ready to move without lower back pain? Dr. Albert Wong evaluates each patient individually for lumbar spinal fusion or cervical spinal fusion as part of our spinal fusion surgery services. Book your Beverly Hills consultation today.

Dr. Albert P. Wong, MD

8436 W. 3rd St, Suite 800 Los Angeles, CA 90048

Phone

(310) 746-5918

Email

Awassistant@docshealth.com

Office Hours

Monday โ€“ Friday: 8:00 AM โ€“ 5:00 PM
Saturday โ€“ Sunday: Closed

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