Hulk Hogan Source: Wikimedia

Hulk Hogan is smacking down the Florida-based Laser Spine Institute.

The Hulkster is suing the institute for persuading him to have half a dozen of “unnecessary and ineffective” spinal operations. After all the procedures, his back problems worsened, according to his lawsuit filed on January 14 in Florida state court in Clearwater.

Bloomberg News reported on January 14 that Hogan, whose real name is Terry G. Bollea, said in his lawsuit that he became aware that the surgeries, “may have been unnecessary or performed negligently after reading a 2011 Bloomberg News report that detailed complaints that the care offered at the center is expensive and ineffective.”

According to his complaint, Hogan says he underwent six procedures over 19 months, getting short-term relief of two to three weeks after each one. The relief was the result of doctors using a laser to burn nerves that eventually regenerate.

Hogan alleges, according to the story, that he was unaware that the institute doctor who urged him to have surgery there also had a substantial ownership interest in the center. He said his health insurer was billed “multiple six figure sums” for the procedures.

Hogan was scheduled to have an anterior inter-body fusion at a local hospital when a friend told him he should consider the Laser Spine Institute, according to the lawsuit. Hogan says he stopped in at the institute without an appointment and met with James St. Louis, the founder of the institute and a neighbor of Hogan’s in Belleair, Florida, near St. Petersburg. He said St. Louis talked him out of getting surgery at the hospital and persuaded him to undergo less invasive measures at the institute’s outpatient center.

The Laser Spine Institute falls into a gray area of spine surgery that has sparked scope of practice fights between traditional spine surgeons and interventionalists and pain management physicians. The institute maintains a high public profile through extensive advertising but has scarcely been seen or heard from the podium at spine conferences or published results. The North American Spine Society (NASS) logo is prominently displayed on the institute’s web site. A NASS spokeswoman told us that the institute was not authorized to use the society’s logo and that there was no relationship between the organizations.

One of Hogan’s complaints reported by Bloomberg News was that his name was used without his permission and that in March 2011 his lawyer ordered the spine center to stop using his likeness.

The institute declined to discuss Hogan’s allegations, telling Bloomberg News in an email that the institute, “cares about its patients and their outcomes, and is proud to have helped thousands of patients achieve a better quality of life.”

Hogan seeks $50 million for lost work opportunities while he was a patient of the institute.

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1 Comment

  1. I worked for that institute and was in room when Hulk had his initial consult. He came there stating he was going to have a 3 level fusion in Tampa in 3 weeks. He also stated he had a big deal in works worth millions and just needed to be well enough to make his deal happen. He stated he could control his falls etc and whatever he needed to do so as to not get hurt. I left that facility after his second surgery. He would never have wrestled again had he had his 3 level fusion yet he did wrestle again. I just saw this article and was surprised he sued Laser Spine. I don’t have good things to say about LSI but shocked over Hulks account!!

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