DISC Surgery Center at Tarzana is now open and ready to serve the San Fernando Valley with advanced spine, joint and interventional pain care, it was announced today by parent company TriasMD. With an emphasis on minimally invasive surgical techniques and motion preservation, the purpose-built ambulatory surgery center (ASC) has earned full AAAHC accreditation, confirming compliance with nationally recognized standards for patient safety and quality of care.
At 10,930 square feet, DISC Surgery Center at Tarzana includes three high-technology operating rooms and 11 patient care bays, including five private preoperative rooms and six post-anesthesia care unit bays. The ASC is located at the intersection of Ventura Boulevard and Lindley Avenue within a newly constructed two-story medical building that also houses DISC’s full-service spine and musculoskeletal clinic, an 8,606-square-foot practice with 11 examination rooms.
Turner Construction, the project’s general contractor, collaborated closely with TriasMD Executive Architect John Gresko to implement design and construction specifications that define the materials, sterilization, air filtration, infection prevention, technology integration and clinical workflow. The culmination is a state-of-the-art surgical environment shown in other DISC Surgery Center locations to support safety, efficiency, and favorable recovery. In an analysis of more than 200 patients who underwent advanced lumbar fusion surgery at a DISC ASC between 2018 and 2024, patients experienced low perioperative complication rates, no immediate postoperative hospital transfers, and universal discharge within 24 hours.
Designed to support the safe delivery of complex outpatient care, DISC Surgery Center at Tarzana is equipped to treat a range of spine and musculoskeletal conditions that no longer require hospital admission when performed in appropriately selected patients. The ASC will provide a wide array of same-day procedures, including interventional pain treatments, spinal fusion, artificial disc replacement, hip and knee replacements, and other minimally invasive procedures. Advances in surgical technique, anesthesia, and postoperative protocols have made the ASC setting an appropriate site of care for many procedures once limited to hospitals.
“Every aspect of this facility reflects careful clinical and operational planning,” explains TriasMD CEO James H. Becker. “But what ultimately drives outcomes is the coordinated work of surgeons, nurses, scrub technicians, and clinical teams within an integrated system that supports patients from initial evaluation through recovery.”