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All Specialties

Spine Care

Specialty spine evaluation, surgery and rehabilitation.

Spine care at Daihika spans the conservative, interventional and surgical spectrum. The aim is straightforward: get patients out of pain and back to function with the least invasive treatment that fits the diagnosis.

Most patients begin with a careful clinical evaluation and targeted imaging. A significant share are managed without surgery — through medication, physiotherapy and image-guided injections. When surgery is indicated, our spine team uses minimally invasive techniques wherever feasible to reduce recovery time and post-operative pain. Complex deformity, trauma and revision surgery are also handled.

Conditions we treat

Lumbar disc herniationCervical radiculopathy and myelopathySpinal stenosisScoliosis and kyphosisVertebral compression fracturesSpinal cord injuryDegenerative disc diseaseSpondylolisthesisSpinal tumours

Treatments and procedures

Conservative management and physiotherapy
Image-guided epidural and selective nerve root injections
Microdiscectomy
Laminectomy and foraminotomy
Spinal fusion
Artificial disc replacement
Minimally invasive spine surgery (MISS)
Scoliosis and deformity correction
Vertebroplasty and kyphoplasty

Technology and infrastructure

C-Arm intra-operative imaging
96-slice CT with 3D reconstruction
Intra-operative neuro-monitoring
4 OTs with laminar airflow

See our full facility list.

Frequently asked questions

Do I really need spine surgery, or can my back pain be managed without it?
The majority of back pain resolves with conservative care — medication, posture correction, physiotherapy and lifestyle changes. Surgery is generally indicated when there is persistent neurological deficit, intractable pain unresponsive to non-surgical treatment, or instability. Our team will always discuss non-surgical options first.
What is minimally invasive spine surgery?
MISS uses smaller incisions and specialised instruments and visualisation to access the spine without cutting through large amounts of muscle. Compared to open surgery it typically means less blood loss, shorter hospital stay and faster return to activity. Whether it's right for your case depends on the specific diagnosis.
How soon after spine surgery can I return to work?
For desk-based work, many patients return in 2–4 weeks after a microdiscectomy or simple decompression. Heavier physical work or driving may require longer. Recovery from fusion or deformity correction is more involved and typically takes 6–12 weeks before resuming most activities.
I had a spine surgery elsewhere and the pain has come back. Can you help?
Yes — we accept patients for revision evaluation. Bring all prior operative notes, imaging and medication history to your first consultation so the team can review what was done and assess the current problem.

Ready to consult?

Speak to our Spine Care team — call, WhatsApp, or book online.