Spine Surgery Second Opinion · Missouri Patients · Naples & Fort Myers FL

Barnes-Jewish and Saint Luke’s
are excellent. They don’t offer
what we offer.

TOPS motion-preserving surgery. Lumbar disc replacement. Barricaid annular closure. Minimally invasive SI joint fusion. Corus MIS posterior fixation. PRP and BMAC biologics. No residents, no fellows — every surgery performed personally by Dr. Katsevman. Hundreds of five-star reviews across Google, Healthgrades, and WebMD. None of this is routinely available at Barnes-Jewish / WashU Medicine, Saint Luke’s Kansas City, MU Health, or Mercy Health. Telemedicine second opinion from St. Louis, Kansas City, or anywhere in Missouri.

★★★★★ Hundreds of five-star reviews · ~2.5h STL→RSW direct · No residents · Telemedicine from MO

"Barnes-Jewish Hospital and Washington University Medicine are world-class academic institutions — consistently ranked among the top programs in the country. Saint Luke’s Kansas City is outstanding. What neither of them offer is TOPS, lumbar disc replacement, Barricaid, or intraoperative PRP and BMAC biologics — and every surgery at both involves residents and fellows. Hundreds of my five-star patients came to Naples after being told fusion was their only option. For many, it was not."

Dr. G. Katsevman, MD · Neurosurgeon & Spine Surgeon
★★★★★Hundreds of five-star reviews · Google, Healthgrades, WebMD · verified patients
~2.5hSt. Louis Lambert (STL) direct to RSW · Kansas City (MCI) via Charlotte or Atlanta
TOPS77% vs 24% over fusion · not offered at Barnes-Jewish, Saint Luke’s, MU Health, or Mercy
0Residents or fellows · Dr. Katsevman performs every case personally · start to finish

Patient reviews

Hundreds of five-star reviews —
from patients who were told fusion was their only option

Across Google, Healthgrades, and WebMD — three independent review platforms — Dr. Katsevman holds a consistently five-star rating with hundreds of verified patient reviews from across the US and internationally. Many came after being recommended fusion at Barnes-Jewish, Saint Luke’s, or MU Health and discovered all their options for the first time in Naples.

5.0
★★★★★

Hundreds of verified five-star reviews from patients across the US and internationally — independent ratings on three platforms.

Google Reviews Healthgrades WebMD

The most important step before spine surgery

A spine surgery second opinion
from a surgeon who offers what Missouri doesn’t

A second opinion is most valuable when the second surgeon can offer something the first cannot. Getting a second opinion within Missouri — Barnes-Jewish / WashU Medicine, Saint Luke’s Kansas City, MU Health, Mercy Health, or SSM Health — produces the same recommendation for the same reason: none of those surgeons are certified for TOPS or lumbar disc replacement, and none offer intraoperative PRP or BMAC biologics. The conversation here is different.

What a telemedicine second opinion
with Dr. Katsevman covers

Before your appointment, upload your MRI, X-rays, CT scans, and any operative reports from prior procedures. Dr. Katsevman reviews all imaging personally — not a coordinator, not a PA, the surgeon himself. The consultation addresses six specific questions that no Missouri academic program can currently answer for most patients:

1

Is the diagnosis correct?Many fusion recommendations follow accurate imaging but incomplete clinical correlation. A fresh review identifies whether the structural finding on MRI actually explains the symptoms — or whether something else, including SI joint dysfunction, is the real pain generator.

2

Are you a TOPS candidate?Grade I spondylolisthesis with stenosis — the most common diagnosis leading to a fusion recommendation — is exactly the indication for TOPS. 77% clinical success vs. 24% for fusion in the FDA RCT. Not offered at Barnes-Jewish, Saint Luke’s, MU Health, or Mercy.

3

Are you a disc replacement candidate?Cervical disc replacement: 5× lower reoperation rate vs. ACDF. Lumbar disc replacement (ProDisc-L®): more than 3× less adjacent degeneration vs. fusion. Neither is routinely offered at Missouri academic programs.

4

Does Barricaid apply to your discectomy?Barricaid closes the annular defect at surgery — reducing reherniation risk by 81%. Not standard at any Missouri academic program.

5

Is your laminectomy being approached optimally?Up to three levels of lumbar decompression through a single ~3 cm incision. Many Missouri academic programs still perform multilevel laminectomy open — often by residents in training.

6

Is posterior fixation being planned with MIS options?Patients recommended a “360-degree” cervical fusion may be candidates for Corus MIS posterior fixation — same stabilization through incisions roughly a quarter the size. Especially important for high-risk patients: osteoporosis, smokers, nicotine users.

The bottom line: If the answer to any of these questions is yes, you have not yet heard all your options. A telemedicine second opinion takes the same time as a local consultation — and can fundamentally change what surgery, if any, you have.

The honest comparison

What Missouri spine programs offer —
and what they don’t

Barnes-Jewish Hospital / Washington University Medicine in St. Louis and Saint Luke’s Kansas City are among the finest academic medical programs in the Midwest. The gap is certification-based — not a reflection of quality, but of which technologies each program has chosen to pursue. Missouri has two strong academic medical cities. Both have the same structural gap.

Barnes-Jewish / WashU · Saint Luke’s KC
MU Health · Mercy · SSM Health

Excellent standard spine surgeryBarnes-Jewish and WashU Medicine are consistently nationally ranked. Saint Luke’s Kansas City is outstanding. Standard ACDF, lumbar fusion, discectomy, and laminectomy outcomes are strong across Missouri. The quality of care is not the issue.

TOPS not available — in St. Louis or Kansas CityThe FDA Breakthrough Device for Grade I spondylolisthesis with stenosis — 77% vs. 24% over fusion in the FDA RCT — is not offered at Barnes-Jewish, Saint Luke’s, MU Health, Mercy, or SSM Health. Certification not pursued. Every spondylolisthesis patient is offered fusion.

Lumbar disc replacement not offeredProDisc-L® — more than 3× less adjacent degeneration vs. fusion — is not available at Missouri academic programs. Fusion is the default recommendation for lumbar disc disease across both Missouri metros.

Barricaid not standard81% fewer reherniations after discectomy — not practiced at Missouri academic centers. The annular defect is left open after surgery regardless of which Missouri institution performs it.

PRP and BMAC biologics not offeredIntraoperative platelet-rich plasma and bone marrow aspirate concentrate are not available at Missouri academic spine programs as optional biological enhancements. Not part of the protocol in St. Louis or Kansas City.

Multilevel laminectomy often performed open — by residentsMany Missouri academic centers still perform multilevel lumbar laminectomy through a large open midline incision. In teaching hospitals, residents perform significant portions of this surgery.

SI joint dysfunction — often missed or not treated surgicallyMany Missouri spine programs do not routinely diagnose or treat SI joint dysfunction surgically. Patients are misdiagnosed with lumbar disc disease and offered lumbar fusion for the wrong pain generator.

Open posterior fixation — no MIS alternativeWhen multilevel cervical fusion requires posterior stabilization, Missouri academic centers use traditional open posterior fixation. Corus MIS posterior fixation is not routinely offered.

Residents and fellows in every surgeryBarnes-Jewish, WashU, Saint Luke’s Kansas City, MU Health, and Mercy are all teaching programs. Residents and fellows perform portions of surgeries at all of them.

This practice in Naples — what’s different

TOPS — official surgeon locator, one of few in the US77% vs. 24% over fusion in FDA RCT. Motion preserved. No cage, no bone graft. Same-day discharge. Not available in St. Louis or Kansas City.

Lumbar AND cervical disc replacement — all three devicesSimplify®, ProDisc-C®, ProDisc-L®. Cervical: 5× lower reoperation rate. Lumbar: more than 3× less adjacent degeneration. Lumbar disc replacement is particularly rare at academic programs anywhere in Missouri. Certified for all three.

Barricaid on every eligible discectomy81% fewer reherniations. Annular defect closed at surgery — standard here, not practiced at any Missouri academic center.

PRP and BMAC biologics — optional cash-pay, intraoperativePlatelet-rich plasma and bone marrow aspirate concentrate harvested during surgery and applied to the operative site. Optional cash-pay enhancements added on top of your insured surgery. Not offered at Missouri academic programs.

MIS multilevel laminectomy — up to 3 levels, ~3 cm incisionUp to three levels of lumbar decompression through a single small incision using the METRx tubular retractor. Muscles spread, not cut. Same-day discharge. Not the standard Missouri approach.

Minimally invasive SI joint fusion — accurately diagnosed and treatedSI joint dysfunction is frequently missed across Missouri. Dr. Katsevman accurately diagnoses it and treats it with percutaneous MIS fusion when conservative care fails. Same-day discharge.

Corus™ MIS posterior fixation — alternative to open rods and screwsQuarter-size incisions vs. open posterior surgery. Level I FUSE study evidence. Especially important for high-risk patients: osteoporosis, smokers, nicotine users. Not routinely offered in Missouri.

Dr. Katsevman performs every case personally — no residents, no fellowsNo exceptions. The surgeon who reviewed your imaging operates from first incision to closure.

Hundreds of five-star reviews — Google, Healthgrades, WebMDVerified, independent patient reviews across three platforms. Read them at floridaspinesurgeon.org/reviews.

The Missouri snowbird window: St. Louis Lambert (STL) to RSW Fort Myers is approximately 2.5 hours direct. Kansas City (MCI) connects via Charlotte or Atlanta in under 4 hours. Missouri has significant Florida seasonal traffic — particularly from St. Louis, Clayton, Ladue, Chesterfield, and Kansas City’s Country Club Plaza area. Surgery and recovery during your Florida stay rather than through a Missouri winter.

The technology and biologics difference

What’s available here
that is not routinely offered at Missouri academic programs

Not at Barnes-Jewish · Saint Luke’s KC · MU Health · Mercy
TOPS™ — spondylolisthesis without fusion

77% vs 24% over fusion in FDA RCT. Grade I spondylolisthesis with stenosis. Stabilizes the slip. Preserves motion. No cage, no bone graft. Same-day discharge. Official TOPS surgeon locator — one of few certified surgeons in the US.

77% vs 24% · FDA RCT
Lumbar rarely at academics · all 3 devices certified
Disc Replacement — cervical and lumbar

Simplify®, ProDisc-C®, ProDisc-L®. Cervical: 5× lower reoperation rate vs. ACDF. Lumbar: more than 3× less adjacent degeneration vs. fusion. Lumbar disc replacement is particularly rare — not available in St. Louis or Kansas City academic programs.

5× lower reoperation · FDA IDE
Not standard at Missouri academic centers
3R Discectomy™ + Barricaid® — 81% fewer reherniations

Annular closure device seals the disc defect at discectomy. 81% fewer reherniations in eligible patients. Recurrence is the most common reason for a second discectomy. Barricaid prevents it — not offered at Missouri academic centers.

81% fewer reherniations
Cash pay · not offered at academic programs
PRP — Platelet-Rich Plasma, intraoperative

Drawn from the patient’s own blood during surgery. Applied to the disc space, epidural space, or incision at the time of the procedure. Optional cash-pay biological enhancement — not available at Missouri academic spine programs. Surgery itself is billed through insurance.

Cash pay · autologous
Cash pay · not offered at academic programs
BMAC — Bone Marrow Aspirate Concentrate, intraoperative

Concentrated bone marrow aspirate harvested during surgery and packed into the fusion cage. Optional cash-pay biological enhancement to support bone healing. Not available at Missouri academic spine programs. Surgery itself is billed through insurance.

Cash pay · autologous
MIS · up to 3 levels · not standard at Missouri centers
MIS Multilevel Laminectomy — up to 3 levels through a single ~3 cm incision

At many Missouri academic centers, multilevel lumbar laminectomy is still performed through a large open midline incision — often by residents. Dr. Katsevman performs up to three-level lumbar decompression through a single ~3 cm incision using the METRx tubular retractor. Muscles spread, not cut. Same-day discharge.

Underdiagnosed · undertreated at Missouri centers
Minimally Invasive SI Joint Fusion — a diagnosis many academic programs miss

Sacroiliac joint dysfunction is one of the most commonly missed diagnoses in spine care. Many Missouri academic programs do not recognize it as a surgical diagnosis. Patients are misdiagnosed with lumbar disc disease and offered fusion for the wrong pain generator. Percutaneous MIS fusion when appropriate. Same-day discharge.

MIS posterior fixation · not standard at Missouri centers
Corus™ — MIS posterior cervical fixation instead of open rods and screws

Patients recommended “360-degree” cervical fusion may be candidates for Corus instead. Same stabilization through incisions roughly a quarter of the size. Far less muscle stripping. Especially valuable for high-risk patients: osteoporosis, smokers, nicotine users. Level I FUSE study evidence, published in Spine.

Level I · FUSE study · Spine
Safety + precision · not universal at academic centers
Robotic Navigation, Neuromonitoring & EOS — not every center has all three

Robotic guidance and intraoperative CT confirmation of every screw before closure. Continuous SSEP, MEP, and EMG neuromonitoring on every cervical, thoracic, and lumbar fusion — not universal even at major academic centers. EOS full-spine standing imaging for alignment planning under load. aprevo® custom 3D-printed interbody cages.

How it works for Missouri patients

Telemedicine second opinion —
then surgery if it makes sense

1
Telemedicine second opinion — from St. Louis, Kansas City, or anywhere in Missouri

Upload your MRI, X-rays, and any prior specialist reports before the appointment. Dr. Katsevman reviews all imaging personally. The consultation covers your diagnosis and — specifically — whether TOPS, disc replacement, Barricaid, MIS laminectomy, MIS SI fusion, Corus, or PRP/BMAC biologics apply to your case. No travel required for this step.

2
Surgical planning — insurance billed, your timeline

Surgery is billed through your insurance in the standard way. Pre-operative requirements are coordinated — most completable in Missouri before you travel. If you choose to add PRP or BMAC biologics, those are priced separately as cash-pay additions and disclosed fully upfront. Surgery scheduled when it works for you.

3
Fly to RSW — ~2.5 hours direct from St. Louis, ~3 hours via connection from Kansas City

St. Louis Lambert (STL) to RSW Fort Myers: approximately 2.5 hours direct on American and Southwest — multiple daily departures. Kansas City (MCI) connects via Charlotte, Atlanta, or Tampa — total travel under 4 hours. Springfield (SGF) and Columbia (COU) connect via St. Louis or Kansas City. RSW is 30 minutes from both offices. Most procedures: same-day discharge.

4
Recovery — Naples or home to Missouri, telemedicine follow-up

Post-operative follow-up by telemedicine from Missouri. Your Missouri physician receives a full operative report. If you have a Florida winter address or stay in Naples for the recovery period, you are recovering in Southwest Florida — not in a Missouri winter.

Questions from Missouri patients

What Missouri patients ask
before requesting a second opinion

Barnes-Jewish recommended fusion for my spondylolisthesis. Is TOPS a real option?
+

Yes — for Grade I spondylolisthesis with stenosis, which is the diagnosis that generates most spondylolisthesis fusion recommendations. TOPS stabilizes the vertebral slip while preserving controlled segmental motion. The FDA randomized controlled trial showed 77% overall clinical success with TOPS versus 24% for fusion at 2 years. Barnes-Jewish and Washington University Medicine are nationally ranked institutions. TOPS is not offered there because the certification has not been pursued — not because the technology is unproven. A telemedicine second opinion determines whether your anatomy is a TOPS candidate before you commit to fusion that permanently eliminates motion at that level.

Saint Luke’s Kansas City recommended ACDF for my neck. Should I consider disc replacement?
+

For single or two-level cervical disc disease without significant instability — which describes most ACDF candidates — disc replacement is often the superior long-term option. The ProDisc-C FDA IDE trial demonstrated a 5-fold lower reoperation rate at 5 years versus ACDF (2.9% vs. 14.5%). Saint Luke’s Kansas City spine surgeons are not certified for Simplify® or ProDisc-C®. A second opinion from a surgeon certified for both — who will recommend whichever is better for your specific anatomy — is the right step before committing to ACDF.

What are PRP and BMAC, and why are they cash pay?
+

PRP (platelet-rich plasma) is drawn from your own blood during surgery and applied to the disc space, epidural space, or operative site to support biological healing. BMAC (bone marrow aspirate concentrate) is harvested from your own bone marrow during surgery and packed into the fusion cage to augment bone growth. Both are autologous — from your own body, collected while you are already under anesthesia. They are cash-pay because insurance does not cover these biological add-ons. The surgery itself is billed to your insurance in the standard way. PRP and BMAC are optional enhancements, priced and disclosed in full before any commitment.

Does my Missouri insurance cover surgery in Florida?
+

Yes — most major Missouri insurance plans cover out-of-state surgery, including Anthem BCBS Missouri, Cigna, Aetna, UnitedHealthcare, and Centene / Healthy Blue. The surgery itself is billed to your insurance in the standard way. The practice provides full documentation for out-of-state claims. PRP and BMAC biologics are the only cash-pay elements — optional add-ons priced and disclosed upfront.

If I get a second opinion at MU Health or Mercy instead of Barnes-Jewish, won’t I hear the same thing?
+

Almost certainly yes. Barnes-Jewish / WashU Medicine, Saint Luke’s Kansas City, MU Health, Mercy Health, and SSM Health all share the same structural limitation: their surgeons are not certified for TOPS or ProDisc-L®, and none offer intraoperative PRP or BMAC. The gap is not institution-specific — it is a feature of the Missouri academic spine landscape, in both St. Louis and Kansas City. The conversation changes when the second surgeon can offer what the first one could not.

I have a place in Southwest Florida for the winter. Can I time surgery around my stay?
+

Yes — this is the ideal arrangement. Start with a telemedicine consultation from Missouri before your departure. If surgery is appropriate, it is scheduled during your Florida stay. Most procedures are same-day or next-day discharge. Recovery at your Southwest Florida address. Telemedicine follow-up after returning to Missouri. St. Louis to Naples is approximately 2.5 hours direct — a practical and comfortable trip. Missouri patients from St. Louis, Clayton, Ladue, Chesterfield, Kansas City, and Leawood find this arrangement very practical.

"Missouri patients — whether from St. Louis or Kansas City — come to me after being seen at Barnes-Jewish or Saint Luke’s and told fusion is their only option. Both are excellent institutions. The technology gap is not about their quality. It is about which certifications each program has pursued. That is the conversation the telemedicine call is designed to have."

Gennadiy (Gene) A. Katsevman, MD

Neurosurgeon & Minimally Invasive Spine Surgeon · Naples & Fort Myers FL

★★★★★ Hundreds of five-star reviews — Google, Healthgrades, WebMD

Naples Top Doctor — Neurosurgery 2024, 2025, 2026

Official surgeon locator: TOPS™, Simplify®, ProDisc-C®, ProDisc-L®

Barricaid® on every eligible discectomy · 81% fewer reherniations

PRP & BMAC biologics — optional cash-pay, intraoperative, autologous

MIS multilevel laminectomy · MIS SI joint fusion · Corus™ MIS posterior fixation

aprevo® 3D-printed cages · EOS alignment · Robotic navigation · Intraoperative CT

Neuromonitoring on every cervical, thoracic, and lumbar fusion

No residents · No fellows · Dr. Katsevman performs every case personally

Fellowship — Barrow Neurological Institute under Dr. Juan Uribe

30+ peer-reviewed publications

Naples: 6101 Pine Ridge Road #101 · (239) 649-1662

Fort Myers: 8380 Riverwalk Park Blvd #320 · (239) 437-1121

Meet the full team →

Missouri Patients · Telemedicine Second Opinion · Hundreds of 5-Star Reviews · Naples FL

Before you commit to fusion
in Missouri — hear all the options.

Upload your MRI before the telemedicine appointment. Dr. Katsevman reviews everything personally. You will know whether TOPS, disc replacement, Barricaid, MIS laminectomy, SI joint fusion, Corus posterior fixation, or PRP and BMAC biologics apply to your case — and whether the trip to Naples is worth making. Hundreds of five-star patients made that call. Most say they wish they had made it sooner.

Fort Myers(239) 437-1121
NaplesPhysicians Regional Medical Center
6101 Pine Ridge Road #101, Naples, FL 34119
Fort Myers8380 Riverwalk Park Blvd #320
Fort Myers, FL 33919
TelemedicineAvailable from St. Louis, Kansas City,
or anywhere in Missouri
This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Not all patients are candidates for TOPS, disc replacement, or Barricaid — anatomy, stability, and bone quality determine eligibility. PRP and BMAC are optional cash-pay biological add-ons; surgery itself is billed through insurance. Insurance coverage for out-of-state procedures varies by plan. Consult Dr. Katsevman to determine the most appropriate evaluation and treatment for your specific condition.