Start With an Online Pre-Assessment: Decide Before You Travel
For an international patient, the costliest thing is an unnecessary journey. So the process begins not with a physical examination but with a remote review of your imaging: you share your current lumbar MRI (with X-ray and, if available, CT) through our multilingual contact line, and we assess the level and type of the herniation and the nerve compression. This pre-assessment gives you an honest picture — whether your case is one that non-surgical methods (medication, physiotherapy, interventional procedures such as a caudal block) may resolve, or one where surgery should be discussed. The aim of an online consultation is not to make a remote diagnosis but to set realistic expectations and a roadmap before you come to Turkey. If you have emergency signs (loss of bladder/bowel control, progressive weakness), you should go to a local emergency department without delay.
Endoscopic Herniated Disc Surgery (PELD / ESS / UBE)
Endoscopic spine surgery is a minimally invasive technique performed through a much smaller incision (about 0.7–1.2 cm) than classic open surgery, and its short hospital stay is notable for patients who travel. There are two main approaches: working through a single channel (monoportal — PELD/ESS) and through two separate small channels (biportal — UBE). Because in UBE the viewing portal and the working portal are separate, the surgeon gains a wider field of view and easier room to manoeuvre; this can matter especially in herniations accompanied by canal stenosis or requiring additional bony decompression. The close-up endoscopic view reveals even the smallest vessel over a nerve root — a major advantage, but one that demands slow, nerve-respecting work. The technique therefore has a steep learning curve and requires experience; it is recommended only after your own MRI has been reviewed.
Classic Microdiscectomy: Still a Strong Standard
Microdiscectomy is the removal of the herniated disc fragment and relief of nerve pressure by passing between the muscles and spinal bones through a skin incision in the lower back, under the microscope. A smaller incision does not always mean a better outcome; in large and calcified herniations, advanced canal stenosis or when more than one level is involved, microdiscectomy or stabilised surgery may be the safer option. Applying the endoscopic method to the wrong patient can lead to inadequate decompression and a second procedure — which for someone who has returned to their home country means another journey. The choice of technique is therefore made according to your shared imaging and anatomy, not fashion. The goal is not the smallest incision but the safest, most effective route.
Who Is It Suitable For, and Who Not?
The ideal candidate for endoscopic discectomy is generally a patient with a single-level disc herniation (for example L4-L5 or L5-S1), dominant leg-radiating pain, clear disc compression on MRI and a suitable general health status. By contrast, when there is herniation at multiple levels, advanced canal stenosis (spinal stenosis), marked facet-joint arthrosis and spinal instability, calcified recurrent herniations, or anatomical conditions that obstruct endoscopic access (such as a high iliac crest), open surgery or fusion methods may come to the fore. This is exactly where a remote review is valuable: your shared MRI largely indicates in advance which group you fall into. A critical nuance: leg-radiating pain from nerve-root compression usually regresses markedly after surgery, but isolated low-back pain may be another sign of disc degeneration and may not fully resolve by removing the fragment alone. Expectations are discussed openly before any travel is planned.
Your Treatment Journey in Turkey: Stay, Recovery, Return
In suitable endoscopic cases the patient is mobilised after 2–4 hours of bed rest, and discharge the same day or the next morning is possible for many — an important advantage for patients on a short trip. In the first week walking returns to normal while sitting is restricted; for this reason the timing of a long flight home is planned individually, usually with a few days of close follow-up after discharge. Return to office work averages 2–3 weeks and to physical work 6–8 weeks. A brace is not mandatory in most endoscopic cases. The honest picture: marked improvement is expected in roughly 85–90% of patients, while 10–15% may have residual symptoms. After you return home, you are given the operative report and images that can be shared with your local doctor for physiotherapy and follow-up.
Risks and Possible Complications
No surgery is without risk, and a patient travelling from abroad should know these before setting off. Possible risks of lumbar disc surgery include anaesthetic risks, bleeding, surgical-site infection, temporary numbness or burning due to nerve-root irritation, dural tear and the associated cerebrospinal fluid leak, and re-herniation (recurrence). The literature reports a recurrence rate of about 3–7% and dural tear at 1–3%; intradiscal infection (discitis) is rare but serious. These rates vary with age, anatomy and disease severity, and correct patient selection markedly lowers them. All of these possibilities and an individual assessment are discussed one by one during the informed-consent process before surgery — in your own language if needed.