Spine Care NJ

ACDF Surgery

ACDF — ANTERIOR CERVICAL DISCECTOMY AND FUSION

ACDF Surgery for Cervical Disc Disease and Neck Pain in Bergen County, New Jersey.

ACDF stands for Anterior Cervical Discectomy and Fusion. It is one of the most commonly performed spine surgeries in the world and the standard surgical treatment for cervical disc disease causing significant arm pain, numbness, weakness, or spinal cord compression that has not responded adequately to conservative care. 

The procedure has three components that its name describes precisely. Anterior means the surgery is performed from the front of the neck rather than the back. Cervical refers to the region of the spine being treated — the seven vertebrae in the neck. Discectomy means the damaged disc is removed. And fusion means the vertebrae above and below the removed disc are joined together permanently using a bone graft or implant to restore stability at that level. 

What makes ACDF particularly effective is the access it provides. Approaching the cervical spine from the front allows the surgeon to remove the herniated disc and any bone spurs directly, from the same side as the nerve compression, without needing to move or retract the spinal cord. For patients with cervical radiculopathy, the arm pain relief after a well-performed ACDF is typically rapid and substantial. For patients with cervical myelopathy from spinal cord compression, ACDF decompresses the cord and stabilizes the spine, halting the progression of neurological symptoms and, in many cases, allowing meaningful recovery of function. 

Rishi N. Sheth, MD, performs ACDF surgery at Spine Care New Jersey using meticulous microsurgical technique developed through his fellowship training at the University of Miami and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. Dr. Sheth also holds ProDisc-C certification, meaning that for eligible patients he can offer cervical disc replacement as a motion-preserving alternative to fusion. He will discuss both options and help each patient make the choice that is right for their specific anatomy and goals. 

CANDIDATES

The Cervical Conditions That ACDF Is Designed to Treat.

ACDF is the appropriate surgical treatment for several distinct cervical spine conditions, each of which involves damage or degeneration at one or more cervical disc levels causing compression of a nerve root or the spinal cord itself. 

Cervical Herniated Disc with Radiculopathy

When a cervical disc herniates and compresses a nerve root, it produces arm pain, numbness, and weakness that can be severe enough to be debilitating. Patients typically describe a sharp, burning, or electric pain that travels from the neck into the shoulder, arm, forearm, and specific fingers. When conservative treatment including physical therapy and cervical epidural injections has not provided adequate relief, ACDF removes the offending disc and frees the nerve root from compression. 

Cervical Spondylosis with Radiculopathy

In older patients, bone spurs and degenerative changes at the cervical disc levels can narrow the foramina through which nerve roots exit the spine, producing the same radicular arm symptoms as a herniated disc. ACDF removes the disc and the associated bone spurs, decompresses the nerve root, and fuses the segment to prevent further degeneration at that level. 

Cervical Myelopathy

When disc herniation or degenerative changes compress the spinal cord itself in the cervical spine, the resulting condition is cervical myelopathy. It can produce a distinctive cluster of symptoms including hand clumsiness, difficulty with fine motor tasks, gait problems, balance difficulties, and weakness in the arms or legs. Cervical myelopathy is a progressive condition that causes irreversible neurological damage if left untreated. ACDF is one of the most effective surgical interventions for cervical myelopathy, directly decompressing the spinal cord and stabilizing the affected levels.

Multi-Level Cervical Disc Disease

For patients with symptomatic disc disease at two or three adjacent cervical levels, ACDF can address all affected levels in a single procedure, with outcomes that remain excellent across appropriately selected multi-level cases. 

THE PROCEDURE

What Happens During an ACDF Procedure — Step by Step.

Understanding the procedure helps patients feel informed and prepared before their surgery. Here is how Rishi N. Sheth, MD, approaches an ACDF at Spine Care New Jersey. 

The patient is positioned on their back on the operating table with the neck gently extended. A small horizontal incision of approximately one to two inches is made in a natural skin crease on one side of the neck. The incision is made to one side of the midline, and the structures of the neck, including the muscles, trachea, and esophagus, are gently moved to the side to expose the front of the cervical spine. This approach, despite involving the front of the neck, is well tolerated because the natural tissue planes of the neck allow this exposure without cutting through muscle. 

Once the spine is exposed, Dr. Sheth uses intraoperative fluoroscopy to confirm the correct disc level. The damaged disc is then removed in its entirety, along with any bone spurs compressing the nerve root or spinal cord. The surgical microscope provides magnified visualization of the spinal cord, nerve roots, and surrounding structures throughout this step, ensuring thorough decompression. 

After the disc space has been cleared and the nerve root and spinal cord are confirmed to be free of compression, a bone graft or structural implant is placed in the disc space to maintain the height between the vertebrae and provide a scaffold for bone fusion. A small titanium plate is then fixed to the front of the vertebrae above and below the disc space using screws, providing immediate stability while the fusion heals. 

The procedure typically takes between one and three hours depending on the number of levels being treated. Most single-level ACDF procedures are completed in approximately one hour. 

RECOVERY

What to Expect Before, During, and After Spinal Decompression Surgery.

Recovery from ACDF follows a predictable course for most patients, and knowing what to expect at each stage helps patients navigate it with confidence. 

Most patients are discharged from the hospital the morning after their ACDF procedure following an overnight observation stay. During the first week, activity is restricted to light walking and personal care. A soft cervical collar may be recommended for comfort during the first week or two, though many patients find they use it less than expected as their discomfort is manageable without it. 

The most valued aspect of early ACDF recovery for most patients is the speed with which the arm pain resolves. The radiating arm pain, numbness, and tingling that brought patients to surgery typically begins improving within the first few days, and many patients describe significant or complete arm pain relief within the first week after surgery. The neck itself is sore from the surgical approach, but this resolves progressively over two to three weeks. 

Return to desk work and sedentary activity typically occurs between two and four weeks after a single-level ACDF. More physically demanding work or activities involving lifting and repetitive neck movements generally require six to eight weeks. Driving restrictions are typically lifted at two to four weeks once the patient has discontinued narcotics and neck motion is comfortable enough to allow safe emergency stops. 

Physical therapy typically begins at four to six weeks and focuses on cervical strengthening, posture, and range of motion exercises appropriate for the post-fusion stage of healing. Heavy lifting and high-impact activities are generally restricted until radiographic evidence of fusion is confirmed, which typically occurs at three to six months on follow-up imaging. 

For patients treated at two or three levels, recovery timelines are similar to single-level ACDF for most daily activities, though restrictions on more demanding physical activities may extend slightly longer. 

WHY CHOOSE RISHI N. SHETH, MD

Cervical Spine Expertise and the Option of Disc Replacement — Only at Spine Care New Jersey.

ACDF is a highly standardized procedure with excellent outcomes in experienced hands. What differentiates surgeons who perform it is not the basic steps of the operation, which are well established, but the quality of the decompression, the precision of the implant placement, the management of complications, and the judgment about whether ACDF is the right operation at all versus alternatives like cervical disc replacement.

rishi sheth md

Rishi N. Sheth, MD brings neurosurgical training from some of the most demanding spine programs in the country to every ACDF he performs. His residency training under Roberto Heros, MD at the University of Miami developed his foundational microsurgical technique, and his spine fellowship under Allan Levi, MD refined his approach to cervical disc disease specifically. His neurosurgical oncology fellowship at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center involved extensive work near the spinal cord, which directly informs the precision he brings to decompression of cord compression in cervical myelopathy cases. 

Equally important is what Dr. Sheth can offer patients who may not need fusion at all. His ProDisc-C certification means that eligible patients can be offered cervical artificial disc replacement as an alternative to ACDF. Disc replacement preserves natural neck motion at the treated level rather than fusing it, and for younger or more active patients with single-level disease, it may be a better long-term choice. At Spine Care New Jersey, this conversation happens during the consultation, not after a fusion has already been scheduled elsewhere. 

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FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Common Questions About ACDF Surgery at Spine Care New Jersey.

ACDF surgery, or anterior cervical discectomy and fusion, is a procedure used to remove a damaged disc in the neck and stabilize the spine to relieve pressure on nerves or the spinal cord.

ACDF surgery may help treat herniated cervical discs, cervical spinal stenosis, degenerative disc disease, nerve compression, and chronic neck pain.

ACDF surgery recovery time varies depending on the patient and the extent of the procedure, but many people return to light activities within a few weeks while full healing may take several months.

During ACDF surgery recovery, patients may experience mild soreness, temporary swallowing discomfort, and restricted neck movement as the spine heals and stabilizes.

Many ACDF procedures use minimally invasive techniques with smaller incisions and less tissue disruption, which may support faster healing and reduced postoperative discomfort.

ACDF surgery has a high success rate for relieving neck pain, arm pain, numbness, and other nerve-related symptoms caused by cervical spine conditions.

Many patients can return to desk work within a few weeks after ACDF surgery, although physically demanding jobs may require a longer recovery period.

Spinal fusion is performed during ACDF surgery to stabilize the cervical spine after the damaged disc is removed and to maintain proper spinal alignment during healing.