Patient Education Series
The Spine Myths
What Your Spine Surgeon Wants You to Know — Evidence-Based Answers to the Questions Patients Ask Every Day.
A Message from the Author
Every week, I walk into an exam room and meet someone who's been carrying a wrong idea about their spine for years. Sometimes decades. And that wrong idea — not their actual spinal condition — is the thing that's making their life smaller.
I've had patients refuse to walk because they were convinced movement would make their "slipped disc" slip further. I've had people sleep on floors for months because someone told them a firm surface was best. I've had grown adults in tears, convinced that a positive MRI report was a death sentence for their active life. None of this needed to happen. But it did, because the myths got there before I did.
That's why I wrote this booklet.
I'm a spine surgeon. I've spent my career operating on spines, yes — but I've also spent it talking to people about their spines. And here's what I've learned: the conversation matters just as much as the surgery. Sometimes more. Because a patient who understands their body makes better decisions, recovers faster, and worries less.
This booklet tackles 41 myths I hear constantly in my practice. Not obscure myths — common ones. The kind that show up in your Google search at 2 a.m. The kind your neighbour mentioned at dinner. The kind your previous doctor might have accidentally reinforced without meaning to.
I've tried to write this the way I'd talk to you in my clinic: directly, with the actual evidence, without the medical jargon, and without pretending everything is simple when it isn't. I'll tell you when something is complicated. I'll tell you when I'm giving you my opinion versus what the research says. And I'll tell you when the answer depends on your specific situation — because sometimes it does.
The eight parts cover everything from activity and movement to imaging, posture, surgery, recovery, and some topics that patients rarely bring up but privately worry about. That last part, Part 8, is new. I added it because after years in clinic I noticed a gap: the questions people ask after surgery, when they're finally home and starting to wonder what their new normal looks like. Those questions deserve real answers too.
One more thing. This booklet is evidence-based, which means I've tried to anchor everything in what the research actually says, not what sounds reassuring or what's been repeated so many times it feels true. But medicine evolves, and I'm one surgeon with one perspective. If anything here conflicts with guidance from your own doctor who knows your specific case — listen to your doctor.
Dr. Ahmed QuateenConsultant Spine Surgeon
Browse All Myths
Back Pain & Activity
The biggest myths about movement and rest — and why your instincts might be working against you.
Imaging & Diagnosis
What scans actually show — and why your MRI report might be scaring you for nothing.
Posture & Ergonomics
Sitting, slouching, school bags, and expensive chairs — what the evidence actually says.
Structure & "Alignment"
Cracking knuckles, tilted pelvises, and curved spines — the anatomy your body is actually doing.
Treatment & Surgery
What surgery can and can't do — and why the fear of the operating table might be holding you back.
Chronicity & Prognosis
Is back pain a life sentence? What we actually know about recovery, aging, and the long game.
Miscellaneous
Mattresses, weather, children, bones, and workplace belts — rounding out the myths that just won't die.
Surgery, Recovery & Life Afterwards
Hardware fears, life restrictions, intimacy, massage, and yoga — the questions patients ask me in the hallway after the appointment ends.
Modern Myths & Emerging Questions
Five beliefs that are rising fast — smartphones, smoking, supplements, traditional remedies, and neuromodulation.
Regeneration, Stem Cells & Paralysis
Emerging ScienceHope, hype, and what patients need to know before spending money — or risking harm. This part covers active research areas — stem cells, PRP, exosomes and spinal cord stimulation. Evidence is still developing; hype is deliberately avoided. Read the full introduction →
The full print booklet — coming soon
This site presents the complete text of Dr. Quateen's patient-education booklet online, free to read. A printed and expanded edition is in progress.
A note on numbering: Myths 1–46 are the original booklet (Parts 1–9). Part 10 (Regeneration, Stem Cells & Paralysis) is a companion chapter continued here as Myths 47–52.