“…Although both conventional and minimally-invasive techniques for cervical discectomy have been shown to be safe, efficacious, and with low rates of postoperative surgical site infections [1,3,[5][6][7][8]34], to the best of our knowledge, there are no literature reports (case studies, prospective data from surgical registries, or prospective, randomized, controlled trials) on comparison of these two variants on the basis of, for example, duration of surgery and clinical outcomes. This situation contrasts with that for lumbar discectomy, in which there are comparisons of conventional and minimally-invasive techniques on the basis of, for example, length of operating time, blood loss, duration of hospital stay, surgical complications, and outcome measures (such as changes in Visual Analogue Scale, Oswestry Disability Index, and the Core Outcome Measures Index after the surgery) and duration of hospital stay [35][36][37]), These comparisons found no significant difference in, for example, rate of surgical complications, duration of hospital stay, and any outcome measures between the two variants [35][36][37].…”