Many of the neurosurgical diseases can be treated without surgery. Chronic pains can be adequately treated with a short-term medication, with drug injections around the ​​pain area (without or under fluoroscopic guidance) or with exercise and physical therapy.

Hearing about the specialty of Neurosurgery, each of us thinks that the work of a Neurosurgeon is purely surgical, i.e. performing surgeries. This view is only partially correct. After a series of tests, each clinician judges the severity and specificity of each patient’s condition and chooses the treatment method. I have a lot of experience in conservative methods of treating neurosurgical diseases, I consider it my ethical duty to perform surgery only when it is necessary. So, there is no need for a visit to the Neurosurgeon to be immediately associated in our minds with the surgery.

– Injections in the area of nerve roots of the spinal canal (Periradicular Therapy – PRT)

– Injection of drugs into the spinal canal (Epidural injection)

– Peri-articular injection of drugs into the small joints (facet joints) of the spine

– Peri-articular injection of drugs in the sacroiliac joint

– Thermal elimination (denervation) of the sensory nerves supplying the joints