As we all know, the elderly do not fall, a fall will fracture, and some elderly people because of serious osteoporosis, even a sneeze can occur spinal fracture. In such cases, many families seem to have the sky fallen, family members, friends and relatives are anxious about it, and run to seek medical treatment. However, no matter what panacea is used, the bedridden old man survives for several months and still passes away due to various complications. In fact, there are standard and advanced minimally invasive treatments for spinal fractures, both internationally and domestically, and age is no longer a surgical “no-go area”. Many people in their 90s can still undergo surgery without any problems. Therefore, experts believe that in the event of a spinal fracture, the elderly should try advanced medical technology instead of following the old method of “100 days in bed with broken bones. Most osteoporotic spine fractures occur in the lumbar and thoracic spine, and most patients do not have signs and symptoms of nerve damage, so the standard minimally invasive treatment of percutaneous vertebroplasty or percutaneous kyphoplasty can be used. This minimally invasive technique was developed in the early 20th century. This minimally invasive technique was introduced to China in the early 20th century and is now a mature treatment method after 10 years of refinement, and is currently available in most tertiary hospitals in Guangzhou. This minimally invasive method involves puncture under local anesthesia and the injection of “bone cement” into the spinal fracture for repositioning and reinforcement under the real-time monitoring of a C-arm X-ray machine, thus achieving hemostasis, pain relief, repositioning and fixation. Minimally invasive surgery can be performed in the operating room or radiology intervention room and takes about 20-30 minutes. When the patient returns to the ward, he or she can eat immediately, and the next day, he or she can be lumbar protected and discharged from the hospital for rehabilitation, while undergoing standardized anti-osteoporosis treatment. In addition, there are a few elderly patients in the clinic who originally had degenerative spine pathologies, degenerative scoliosis, degenerative instability and other disorders, and fractures may lead to paralysis. In fact, with the development of medicine to date, it is no longer difficult to complete decompression, repositioning, and internal fixation of spinal fractures as long as the medical staff of spinal orthopedics, internal medicine, and anesthesiology operating rooms work together. Most patients can be out of bed by the second or third day after surgery and can be discharged for recovery in about 10 days. Conservative treatment is prone to complications Doctors advise elderly fracture patients not to stumble over their fractures and lie in wait for bedside complications to come. It is understood that conservative treatment of fractures in the elderly often results in many complications due to prolonged bed rest, the most common of which is lung infection and high mortality. In contrast, if you undergo surgery, although there are inevitable surgical risks, the mortality rate is lower than that of conservative treatment such as bed rest.