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Dr. Jared Ament - Disc Replacement, Body Mechanics, and When Spine Surgery Makes Sense In this episode, Dr. Mike sits down with board-certified neurosurgeon Dr. Jared Ament for a grounded, no-BS conversation about the modern spine - from body mechanics to disc replacement surgery. Dr. Ament specializes in motion-preserving spine procedures, including cervical and lumbar disc replacement and the TOPS procedure for lumbar instability. But this conversation is not just about surgery. It’s about understanding how the spine actually breaks down over time - and how positioning, compression, and movement patterns drive degeneration long before anyone enters an operating room. Together, we unpack: -The real causes of disc degeneration and disc bulges -How poor posture and anterior pelvic tilt increase lumbar compression -What spinal stenosis and spondylolisthesis actually mean -The difference between nerve irritation and structural instability -Why MRI findings don’t always match symptoms -When conservative care works - and when it doesn’t -Disc replacement vs spinal fusion -The philosophy behind motion preservation surgery -The TOPS procedure and dynamic stabilization systems -How locking down a spinal segment affects adjacent levels Dr. Ament explains how he evaluates patients with chronic back pain, sciatica, stenosis, and instability, and how he determines whether someone is a candidate for disc replacement, decompression, stabilization, or non-surgical management. This episode bridges two important realities: Most chronic back pain begins with mechanical stress, alignment issues, and repetitive compression. But in some cases, structural failure progresses to the point where surgical intervention is appropriate. Understanding where you fall on that spectrum is critical. If you’ve been diagnosed with a herniated disc, degenerative disc disease, spinal stenosis, spondylolisthesis, or chronic sciatica - and you’re wondering whether surgery is inevitable - this conversation will give you clarity. This is not fear-based medicine. It’s not anti-surgery. It’s not anti-movement. It’s a discussion about biomechanics, spine health, disc replacement surgery, and how to make informed decisions before and after structural breakdown. Because sometimes the solution is movement. Sometimes it’s structural correction. And sometimes it’s knowing the difference.