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Spondylolisthesis (Slipped Vertebra) Surgery in Turkey (for International Patients)

Spondylolisthesis is forward slippage of one vertebra over the one below it, most often at the lower lumbar levels (L4-L5, L5-S1). Many low-grade slips cause no symptoms; some cause low-back pain, leg-radiating pain or difficulty walking. For patients considering treatment in Turkey from abroad, the key point is this: a diagnosis of spondylolisthesis does not by itself mean surgery, and this can be clarified before a long journey. Most patients improve with exercise, physiotherapy and pain management. This page explains spondylolisthesis in plain terms for patients reaching us from abroad: what is done in which situation, the online pre-assessment you receive by sharing your MRI and X-rays, and how a treatment journey in Turkey is planned.

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What Is Spondylolisthesis and Why Does It Happen?

Spondylolisthesis is forward displacement of a vertebral body over the one beneath it; as it progresses, the spinal canal and the canal through which the nerve roots pass (the foramen) can narrow. Two types are most common: the 'isthmic' type due to a defect in the narrow bony bridge called the pars interarticularis (spondylolysis) — more frequent in the young and in athletes (gymnastics, wrestling, football); and the 'degenerative' type arising from age-related wear of the disc and facet joints — especially in postmenopausal women and most often at L4-L5. A family history increases risk. The cause and level of the slip directly affect the treatment plan, so saying 'I have a slip' is not enough on its own.

Why Does the Grade of Slip Matter? (Meyerding)

The amount of slip is graded against the anteroposterior diameter of the lower vertebral body: Grade I (0-25%), Grade II (26-50%), Grade III (51-75%), Grade IV (76-100%) and spondyloptosis (over 100%). Low-grade slips (Grade I-II) are usually mildly to moderately symptomatic and are often managed without surgery; higher grades more often cause severe pain, deformity and neurological problems. But grade does not decide alone: whether the slip is progressing, whether there is nerve compression and the patient's complaints are weighed together. Spino-pelvic measurements such as slip angle and pelvic incidence are also important, especially in surgical planning.

When Non-Surgical, When Surgery?

In most low-grade, mildly symptomatic cases the approach is non-surgical and usually controls the complaints: activity modification, weight management, core stabilization and flexibility exercises, analgesic/anti-inflammatory therapy and, in selected cases, epidural steroid injection; bracing for acute pars lesions in the young. Surgery is considered for progressive weakness, cauda equina signs (loss of bladder/bowel control), pain unresponsive to conservative care, and high-grade or progressing slips. Surgical options are decompression to relieve nerve pressure, decompression plus fusion (stabilizing the vertebra) when needed, and interbody fusion techniques (TLIF, PLIF, ALIF) in suitable cases; minimally invasive methods are used in selected patients.

Surgery, Recovery and the Treatment Journey

If surgery is planned, assessment is made with a standing lateral radiograph, flexion-extension views (for dynamic instability) and MRI; CT is added when a pars defect is suspected. Much of this imaging can be shared and reviewed remotely before you travel. After fusion surgery the hospital stay is usually a few days, with early mobilization and clot (DVT) prophylaxis. Because of DVT risk, especially in patients who have fusion, the timing of a long flight is planned carefully and a period of close follow-up after discharge is recommended. Return to office work is around 6-8 weeks for most patients, and return to physical work can take 3-6 months. After you return home you are given the operative report and images for follow-up. Recovery is faster where decompression alone is enough; it is longer when fusion is added.

Risks and Realistic Expectations

Every surgery carries risk, and these should be discussed openly: bleeding, infection, temporary symptoms from nerve-root irritation, dural tear, and in fusion surgery non-union (pseudarthrosis) or a new problem over time at the neighbouring level (adjacent segment disease). These rates vary with slip grade, age, bone quality and accompanying illnesses; correct patient selection and planning markedly reduce risk. As for results, the honest picture is this: leg-radiating pain due to nerve compression usually regresses markedly after surgery; isolated back pain may not fully disappear. We do not promise a guaranteed outcome; expectations are shared openly before surgery.

Sources

1Greenberg MS. Greenberg's Handbook of Neurosurgery. 10th ed. Thieme; 2023:1337-1340.
2Winn HR, ed. Youmans Neurological Surgery. 6th ed. Saunders; 2011.
3North American Spine Society (NASS) — Clinical Guidelines: Degenerative Lumbar Spondylolisthesis.
📚 Read our encyclopedia article for a detailed, fully-referenced medical explanation

자주 묻는 질문

Does everyone with a slipped vertebra need surgery?

No. Most low-grade, mildly symptomatic slips are controlled with exercise, physiotherapy and pain management. Surgery usually comes up with a progressing slip, resistant pain, progressive weakness or cauda equina signs. The decision is individual, weighing the grade of slip, nerve compression and complaints together.

Is fusion (screws and rods) always needed for a slipped vertebra?

No. In some cases decompression to relieve nerve pressure alone is enough, while instability or a high-grade slip calls for adding fusion to decompression. Which method is appropriate is determined by the slip type, grade, spinal stability and spino-pelvic measurements.

Will my back pain disappear completely after surgery?

Leg-radiating pain due to nerve-root compression regresses markedly in most patients. However, isolated back pain may be a sign of disc and joint degeneration and may not disappear completely. Setting realistic goals is part of treatment; expectations are discussed openly before surgery.

I'm in another country — how do I apply for treatment?

You can share your current MRI and X-ray images (including a standing lateral view) via our multilingual WhatsApp line; after a remote pre-assessment we discuss whether surgery is needed, whether decompression or fusion may be required and the likely length of stay, and then arrange a video consultation. We recommend travelling to Turkey only if the assessment makes surgery meaningful and after you have agreed.

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