Dr. Rami Hamed Medical Blog

Full Endoscopic Synovial Cyst Excision Targeting Lumbar Facet Joint Synovial Cysts

Written by Dr. Rami Hamed | June 19, 2025

Clinical Context

Synovial cysts of the lumbar facet joints are:

  • Degenerative in origin, arising from the facet capsule.
  • Often associated with segmental instability or facet arthropathy.
  • Most common at L4–L5, causing foraminal or lateral recess stenosis, compressing the exiting or traversing nerve root.

Symptoms include:

Endoscopic Surgical Solution

Indications

  • Confirmed cyst on MRI compressing neural structures
  • Refractory symptoms despite conservative management
  • Positive correlation with facet degeneration
  • Patient preference to avoid open surgery/fusion when instability is absent

Surgical Technique

  • Approach: Transforaminal or interlaminar full-endoscopic route based on cyst location (foraminal vs medial)
  • Anesthesia: Local with sedation or general anesthesia
  • Navigation: Fluoroscopy and endoscopic visualization
  • Steps:
    1. Access the facet joint capsule endoscopically
    2. Use RF ablation and micro-instruments to expose and decompress the cyst
    3. Perform cyst wall excision and evacuation of gelatinous contents
    4. Decompress adjacent neural elements
    5. Preserve surrounding bone and ligament when feasible
  • Optional: Partial SAP resection if access is limited, especially in foraminal cysts.

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Advantages of Full-Endoscopic Approach

  • Minimally invasive: <1 cm incision, no muscle stripping
  • No destabilization: Preserves midline structures
  • Direct visualization = precise cyst removal
  • Avoids fusion in cases without gross instability
  • Fast recovery and outpatient surgery

Outcomes

  • Symptom resolution in most cases (80–95% in literature)
  • Low recurrence when the capsule is fully removed
  • Reduced operative time and hospital stay
  • Lower morbidity than open decompression

Key Considerations

  • Pre-op imaging: MRI + dynamic X-rays (to rule out instability)
  • Recurrence: Rare if complete excision of the cyst wall is achieved
  • Instability: In cases with gross facet degeneration or spondylolisthesis, fusion may be considered

Dr. Rami Hamed
Consultant Spine & Orthopedic Surgeon
Founder, DRHC – Dubai Healthcare City
πŸ“ž β€ͺ+971 4 279 8800‬
🌐 www.drhc.ae
πŸ“ Dubai Healthcare City, Building 52