Spine care for the western suburbs.
For patients in Naperville, Aurora, Wheaton, Lisle, and Plainfield, this office keeps specialty spine care within the western suburbs. The practice philosophy is unchanged: careful diagnosis, conservative recommendations when appropriate, and technically precise surgery only when it adds real value.
Conditions, not categories.
Most Naperville visits involve cervical and lumbar problems that have outlasted physical therapy, medication, injections, or simple rest. Persistent radicular pain, lumbar stenosis, disc herniation, spondylolisthesis, and SI joint dysfunction are common reasons patients book here.
Bring imaging if you have it. If you do not, we can order what is actually useful instead of starting with a pile of unnecessary studies. The first appointment is meant to explain the mechanics of the problem and clarify whether any operation belongs in the conversation at all.
A suburban entry point into the full Rush surgical network.
When surgery is indicated, west-suburban patients are often scheduled at Rush Oak Brook Surgery Center for outpatient cases or at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago for inpatient and complex cases. The office visit stays local even when the procedure needs a larger facility.
That combination works well for professionals, athletes, and parents who want a closer consultation site but still want access to motion-preserving procedures, minimally invasive decompression, and modern navigation-assisted techniques.
Map and directions.
This location is often the best fit for patients who want an in-person surgical opinion but would rather not start with a downtown hospital campus.
- By car: the office is just off I-88 at Naperville Road with free patient parking in the building lot.
- From Aurora or Plainfield: most drives are fifteen to twenty minutes via I-88 or Route 59, depending on time of day.
- Accessibility: elevator access, ADA-compliant exam rooms, and accessible parking sit close to the entrance.
- Planning tip: morning appointments are usually the easiest for patients trying to avoid eastbound congestion toward the city.