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Center for Spine & Orthopedics — Specialist Evaluation for Car Accident Injuries

Dr. Leach, MDreviewed by Dr. Ken Allan

Conservative care, including physical therapy, massage therapy, and interventional pain management, resolves most car accident injuries. But some injuries involve structural damage that conservative treatment can manage around without actually resolving. When that's the clinical picture, your managing physician refers to a spine and orthopedic specialist who can evaluate the structure directly, determine whether surgical intervention is indicated, and coordinate care if it is.

Center for Spine & Orthopedics in Thornton is CCC's primary orthopedic specialist partner in the north metro area.

Provider Contact

Website: centerspineortho.com Phone: 303-286-0990

What Center for Spine & Orthopedics Offers

Center for Spine & Orthopedics specializes in the evaluation and treatment of spinal and orthopedic conditions, with particular expertise in the injury patterns common in motor vehicle accidents:

Spine Evaluation and Consultation

Comprehensive evaluation of cervical, thoracic, and lumbar spine injuries. The spine specialist reviews your clinical history, imaging, and treatment course, then performs an examination focused on identifying structural damage that may require intervention beyond conservative care.

Spine evaluation addresses: disc herniation with significant nerve compression, multi-level disc injury, vertebral fracture assessment, cervical or lumbar instability, and progressive neurological deficits that conservative care hasn't resolved.

Orthopedic Consultation

Beyond the spine, orthopedic evaluation addresses joint injuries common in motor vehicle accidents: shoulder injuries from steering wheel impact or seatbelt forces, knee injuries from dashboard contact, wrist and hand injuries from bracing on impact, and hip injuries from pelvis loading.

Surgical Intervention

When conservative care and interventional pain management have been appropriately trialed and structural pathology warrants it, Center for Spine & Orthopedics provides surgical evaluation and intervention. Common procedures include discectomy and fusion for severe disc herniation with nerve compression, vertebroplasty for vertebral compression fractures, and repair of ligamentous instability.

Surgical recommendation is never the starting point. It's the outcome of a structured evaluation process that first establishes what conservative and interventional approaches have been tried, for how long, and what they achieved.

Orthopedic Imaging Interpretation

The spine specialist reviews your MRI, CT, and X-ray findings in the context of your clinical presentation, not as a standalone radiology read. Correlation between imaging findings and your actual symptoms and examination determines what the structural findings mean for your treatment.

Location

Center for Spine & Orthopedics 10099 RidgeGate Pkwy., Suite 110, Lone Tree, CO 80124 (Serving the north and south metro, accessible from CCC's Aurora, Westminster, and Lakewood clinic areas)

When CCC Refers to Center for Spine & Orthopedics

Referral criteria are evidence-based and clinically driven. Your managing physician considers orthopedic specialist evaluation when:

  • Conservative care has been appropriately trialed without adequate progress: The evidence-based standard is approximately 6-8 weeks of coordinated conservative care (physical therapy, massage therapy) as the first-line approach for motor vehicle injuries (AAPM 2013; NICE 2021). When this trial hasn't produced the expected improvement, specialist evaluation is indicated.
  • Imaging reveals structural damage requiring specialist assessment: Significant disc herniation with ongoing nerve root compression, evidence of spinal instability, complex fracture patterns, or imaging findings that outpace what conservative care can address. These warrant specialist input before continuing or modifying the conservative care plan.
  • Progressive neurological symptoms: Worsening weakness, expanding sensory loss, or new neurological deficits suggest nerve involvement that warrants specialist evaluation. These findings may indicate that the structural problem is progressing rather than resolving.
  • Injury pattern that demands early specialist input: Not every orthopedic referral waits for conservative care to fail. High-energy collisions with significant structural findings, suspected ligamentous instability, or complex fracture patterns may warrant early orthopedic consultation alongside conservative care, not instead of it.

How the Referral Integrates with Your Care Plan

When your managing physician refers to Center for Spine & Orthopedics, the referral package includes your complete clinical documentation: examination findings, treatment history, imaging studies with radiologist reports, and the specific clinical questions the specialist needs to answer.

The specialist doesn't encounter you as a new patient. They receive the full context of your injury and treatment course. This is what coordinated care looks like at the specialist level.

After the evaluation, the orthopedic specialist's findings and recommendations return to your managing physician, who integrates them into your overall treatment plan. If the recommendation is continued conservative care with modifications, that happens through CCC. If interventional procedures are recommended, they're coordinated with the pain management team. If surgery is recommended, your managing physician remains involved in pre-surgical coordination and post-surgical rehabilitation planning.

The relationship between your managing physician and the orthopedic specialist is bidirectional and ongoing, not a handoff.

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Does an orthopedic referral mean I'm going to need surgery?
No. Most orthopedic consultations result in recommendations for continued or modified conservative care, specific interventional procedures, or reassessment at a defined interval. The specialist evaluates the structural picture and recommends the appropriate course of action. Surgery is one possible outcome, not the expected one. CCC refers to orthopedics to get specialist input on what the injury requires, not to route toward surgery.
Why does it take 6-8 weeks of conservative care before orthopedic referral?
Evidence-based treatment guidelines establish that coordinated conservative care, including physical therapy and massage therapy, is the appropriate first-line treatment for most motor vehicle injuries (AAPM 2013; NICE 2021). This approach resolves the majority of injuries without specialist intervention. Escalating to specialist care before conservative treatment has been adequately trialed produces worse outcomes and higher costs than following the evidence-based sequence.
Will my treatment stop while I wait for the specialist appointment?
No. Conservative care continues during the referral process and typically during the evaluation period. Only if your managing physician determines that a specific treatment should pause pending the orthopedic assessment would any treatment change, and that would be discussed with you explicitly.
Is the orthopedic consultation covered under my accident claim?
Specialist referrals ordered by your managing physician for documented accident injuries are covered under your claim through MedPay, PIP, or your lien arrangement. Your case manager coordinates coverage before the appointment.
What if the specialist recommends surgery and I'm not sure about it?
Surgical recommendation is a clinical opinion, not a mandate. You have the right to a second opinion, to continue conservative care if you choose, or to delay the decision. Your managing physician can help you understand the specialist's recommendation and what it means for your recovery timeline and long-term prognosis. The decision is yours.

Ready to start your recovery?

Call (720) 716-4379

A care coordinator will verify your benefits and schedule your first visit. No upfront cost.

Dr. Leach, MD · reviewed by Dr. Ken Allan · 2026-03-13T00:00:00.000Z

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Ready to start your recovery?

Call (720) 716-4379

A care coordinator will verify your benefits and schedule your first visit. No upfront cost.