Percutaneous mechanical disc decompression
During this procedure, your surgeon removes some of the tissue from the center of the bulging disc that is causing you pain. The goal is to remove as little material as possible. In this way, the disc stays stable. The surgeon, with X-ray guidance, uses a needle to reach the disc and remove the extra material from the jelly-like center of the disc. This is known as the nucleus pulposus. It's usually done under local anesthesia in a doctor's office or an outpatient surgery center. Your movement may be limited for a while after the procedure. But healing is faster than with an open surgery.
Percutaneous thermal intradiscal procedures
This includes intradiscal electrotherapy or electrothermal therapy.
For this treatment, the doctor inserts a wire electrode near the disk. Electric current generates heat in the wire. The heat shrinks the disc to ease pain. Often, this procedure isn't covered by insurance.
Laser disc decompression
Another treatment takes some of the fluid out of the disc that is causing pain. Laser treatments have been used to deflate a disc. The doctor inserts an optical fiber into the disc. The heat created causes a small amount of the water content in the center of the disc to turn into vapor. The heat may reduce pain by affecting the chemical structure and decreasing the pressure in the disc.