Surgery and pain
Many surgeries have little or no clinical evidence proving their effectiveness, and some show no more benefit than the placebo, or sham, surgeries used in medical research studies.
Back surgery is a prime area to be cautious. Many doctors recommend spinal fusion surgery for chronic back pain. But a study comparing the surgery to exercise found that both were as effective in reducing pain.
Disk bulges and protrusions identified by MRI are just as common in people without back pain as in people with back pain, according to a study published in theNew England Journal of Medicine. That means if your surgeon tells you that you need surgery to correct a bulging disk, get a second opinion.
The disk may not have anything to do with your pain.
Another major study found that a common surgery performed on patients with arthritis of the knee was no better at relieving pain or improving knee function than a sham, or fake, operation in which incisions were made but no surgery was performed.
Bottom line: if your doctor recommends surgery for chronic pain or other chronic conditions, get a second and even a third opinion, and don't go under the knife until you exhaust all your other options.