
Back pain has a way of making people jump straight to the worst-case scenario.
Many patients walk into Dr. Evan Trapana’s office already worried that surgery is inevitable. They’ve had pain for weeks. Sometimes months. Maybe even years. They’ve tried rest. Physical therapy. Medications. Injections. Nothing feels like it’s fixing the problem.
But here’s something Dr. Trapana tells patients every single day:
Most back pain does not require surgery.
And rushing into it can sometimes do more harm than good.
Back pain is incredibly common. Almost everyone experiences it at some point.
What’s less common is back pain that truly needs an operation.
The challenge is that pain doesn’t always correlate with something “broken.” MRIs often show disc bulges, degeneration, or arthritis — findings that sound alarming but are actually normal parts of aging for many people.
Dr. Trapana spends a lot of time helping patients separate what looks scary on imaging from what actually explains their symptoms.
That distinction matters.
One of the biggest misconceptions is that severe pain automatically means surgery.
It doesn’t.
Dr. Trapana evaluates several factors before surgery is even part of the conversation:
Pain without neurologic deficit is often best treated conservatively first.
At Florida Spine, Dr. Trapana regularly sees patients with conditions that sound surgical — but usually aren’t.
Muscle and ligament strains
Often painful. Often frustrating. Rarely surgical.
Degenerative disc disease
A common MRI finding that doesn’t always cause symptoms.
Mild disc bulges
Very common. Often incidental.
Facet joint arthritis
Frequently managed with therapy, injections, and activity modification.
Mechanical back pain
Pain that changes with movement, posture, or activity often responds to non-surgical care.
In these cases, surgery doesn’t fix the underlying issue — because there’s nothing structural to “repair.”
Dr. Evan Trapana is a spine specialist, but that doesn’t mean he pushes surgery.
In fact, his philosophy is the opposite.
Surgery is a tool — not a default.
If an operation won’t clearly improve pain, function, or quality of life, Dr. Trapana won’t recommend it. That honesty is exactly why many patients seek him out for second opinions.
Sometimes the best surgical decision is not having surgery at all.
There are situations where surgery is the right choice. Dr. Trapana is very clear about that.
Surgery is more likely to be appropriate when patients have:
Even then, the goal isn’t just removing pain — it’s restoring function safely.
Dr. Trapana often sees patients who were told surgery was their only option — only to discover that other treatments hadn’t been fully explored.
Different spine specialists interpret imaging differently.
Different surgeons have different thresholds for operating.
A second opinion can confirm surgery is necessary — or prevent an unnecessary one.
Either outcome is valuable.
One mistake patients make is thinking that non-surgical care means waiting it out.
It doesn’t.
Dr. Trapana frequently coordinates:
This approach allows many patients to recover without surgery — and without risking irreversible changes.
One of the most reassuring indicators Dr. Trapana looks for is improvement — even if it’s slow.
Pain that gradually improves, even with flare-ups, usually points away from surgery.
Surgery is rarely urgent for back pain alone. And waiting doesn’t usually make outcomes worse when monitored properly.
Not necessarily. Imaging findings must match symptoms to justify surgery.
It depends on symptoms, severity, and neurologic findings. Dr. Trapana individualizes this timeline.
Yes. In the wrong situation, surgery can fail to relieve pain or even create new problems.
That doesn’t automatically mean surgery is next. The reason injections failed matters.
When monitored properly, waiting is often safe — and sometimes beneficial.
Back pain is frustrating. Living with it is exhausting.
But surgery isn’t the answer for most patients.
Dr. Evan Trapana focuses on understanding why the pain exists before deciding how to treat it. Sometimes that leads to surgery. Often, it doesn’t.
And knowing the difference protects patients from unnecessary procedures — and unnecessary recovery.
If you’re dealing with back pain and unsure whether surgery is truly necessary, a consultation can provide clarity.
Dr. Trapana specializes in:
🌐 Website: https://floridaspine.net
📞 Phone: 305-243-3286
During your visit, you can expect: