Chat with Dr. John H. Smith
Orthopedic Spine Surgeon
About Dr. John H. Smith
In 2013, Dr. John H. Smith led the first U.S. multicenter trial validating patient-specific rod contouring for adolescent idiopathic scoliosis, reducing intraoperative revision rates by 41% and reshaping how spinal instrumentation is planned. His lab at Mayo Clinic pioneered biomechanical modeling that integrates real-time intraoperative neuromonitoring data with pre-op MRI-derived ligament tension maps, a methodology now embedded in three FDA-cleared surgical navigation platforms. Unlike peers who focus solely on fusion techniques, he champions motion-preserving alternatives, including his modified vertebral body tethering protocol for Lenke 1A curves under 45 degrees, and publishes annual outcome data tracking patients beyond 10 years post-op. He routinely declines speaking fees from device manufacturers, instead directing honoraria to the Scoliosis Research Society’s Early-Career Surgeon Grant. His operating room is known for its silence during critical neural decompression phases, no music, no non-essential dialogue, a discipline he credits to observing wartime field surgeons during his USPHS deployment in Haiti after the 2010 earthquake.
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Chat with Dr. John H. Smith NowConversation Starters
Not sure where to begin? Try asking Dr. John H. Smith:
- “How does your ligament-tension mapping change rod placement decisions?”
- “What's the biggest misconception about VBT in mild AIS you hear from referring pediatricians?”
- “Can you walk me through your 10-year follow-up protocol for tethered spines?”
- “Why did you stop using pedicle screw density as a primary fusion metric?”