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  • Antony
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    Hello Dr. Corenman,

    Thank you for your reply. I have a couple follow-up questions regarding your response:

    Re: the disc became degenerative as shear forces were unrestrained due to the pars fractures (the pars act as “doorstops” to prevent shear forces on the disc)….You are not a candidate for direct pars repair if you have a slip of L5 on S1 as this means that the disc is now degenerative.
    – My 10% L5-S1 anterolisthesis has been stable since I was about 20. That is, the size of the slip has not changed in that period of time. Is it possible to have a stable, small anterolisthesis at my age without disc degeneration? or is any slip at all, no matter how small or stable indicative of a degenerative disc?

    Re: With degenerative changes of the disc, there is no point to repair the pars at this juncture of your disorder.
    – Can you explain why this is? Does a direct repair take future treatment options off the table (e.g. fusion?)? Doesn’t stabilizing a pars fracture with direct repair limit the shear forces causing stenosis, disc degeneration, and perhaps extend the life of the disc? Is it possible for mildly degenerative discs to heal once those shear forces are limited?

    Why would it be preferable to wait and undergo a fusion down the road rather than a direct repair sooner which may help prevent future disc degeneration?

    Thanks again for the advice and information. I really appreciate your taking the time to consider my questions.

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