Cedars-Sinai Blog
The Cowboy Spine Surgeon
Nov 21, 2025 Christian Bordal
Photo by Al Cuizon.
If you’ve ever been to the rodeo, you know what an exciting adrenaline rush it can be. For the competitors, however, the events can be physically punishing, particularly for an athlete’s back. Bumped, bucked, tossed and trampled by animals many times their own size and weight, rodeo athletes can suffer sudden catastrophic spinal injuries, as well as deterioration from long-term wear and tear.
No one knows this better than J. Patrick Johnson, MD, medical director of Orthopaedics at Cedars-Sinai and senior advisor to the Cedars-Sinai Spine Center of Excellence. The renowned neurosurgeon grew up on a cattle ranch in Montana. As a young man, he competed riding bulls and broncs, and in addition to his regular practice, Johnson has come to be nationally known for his work repairing the spines of elite rodeo and other equestrian athletes, as well as working ranchers. His pioneering use of artificial discs and minimally invasive and robotic surgery have extended many careers that might otherwise have been cut short.
“I understand these people. I know what they do,” said Johnson. “And I know what it’s going to take to fix their backs so they can get back on the horse and compete—or just get back to work on the ranch.”
J Patrick Johnson, MD
The Johnstons (With a T)
Lance Johnson in 2019 winning the 50th National Reined Cow Horse Association Snaffle Bit Futurity Open Championship. Photo by Primo Morales Photography.
Lance Johnston and his wife, Tammy, run a horse training ranch in Central California. Johnston is 6 feet, 4 inches, sports a comfortable drawl and a black Stetson, and is one of the all-time winningest athletes in the sport of reined cow horse. However, many years of competition and training young horses left him suffering from excruciating back pain. After one event, the pain was so severe he left the stadium in a wheelchair.
“I had to dress him every day because he couldn’t bend over,” said Tammy Johnston. “He couldn’t even walk, so he’d ride a scooter to the barn before getting up on the horses to do the daily training. That was our life for several years prior to surgery.”
Johnston had been putting off major spine surgery because he was afraid it would be career-ending.
“I’d talked with a few different spine surgeons over the years, and they were all like, ‘You just need to quit. We’re gonna have to fuse your whole back,’” he said. “But cow horses are my passion. I wasn’t ready to give up my career.”
Then, fellow rodeo athletes advised him to see Johnson at Cedars-Sinai.
"Most patients just want the pain to go away, but these athletes want to ride, rope and compete again. That’s a different level of recovery."
“Just Get Me Back Out There.”
“When he first came to see me, it looked like a bomb had gone off in his back,” said Johnson. “Things were all bent and twisted up in there.”
In addition to damaged discs and deteriorated vertebrae, Johnston had scoliosis, which the surgeon said probably began in childhood and got worse over time.
Lance Johnston's pre- and post-surgery X-rays.
“These aren’t gentle sports on the cowboy: a lot of torque, stress and strain on the spine,” Johnson said.
The surgeon noted that many athletes—particularly those from the punishing world of rodeo and equine sports—wish to be treated differently than other patients.
“Most patients just want the pain to go away,” he said. “But these athletes want to ride, rope and compete again. That’s a different level of recovery.”
For Johnston, the surgeon did not propose a complete fusion, which would eliminate almost all pain but reduce flexibility and end his career as a competitive horseman. Instead, Johnson designed a plan tailored specifically to the unique physical demands of the sport.
“We fused part of his lumbar spine, but we left the very bottom untreated—that’s the part that connects to the pelvis where you need to twist,” Johnson explained.
Since the surgery in 2020, Johnston experiences far less pain and has continued his elite run in the top ranks of reined cow horse athletes, winning many more trophies.
Veterinary Medicine or Neurosurgery?
J. Patrick Johnson, MD, performing spine surgery.
Early in his life, Johnson says he planned to go to veterinary school and become a cow and horse doctor. Instead, he ended up following in the footsteps of his father who was a neurosurgeon—Montana’s first.
Across his 30-year career, Johnson has gained international recognition for his work in spine surgery, including his development of minimally invasive, robot-assisted techniques; motion-preserving surgery; and artificial disc technology, for which he ran the first clinical trials on the West Coast in 2002.
“These days, more neurosurgeons are opting to fuse spines, but I prefer to use artificial disks and laminectomies and other nerve decompression when I can,” Johnson said. “They’re less invasive and help preserve spinal flexibility. That’s good for everyone, but it’s particularly good for athletes.”
He has expanded his practice from Los Angeles and sees patients in clinics in Santa Ynez, Santa Barbara, Montana and Dallas-Fort Worth, a hub for rodeo and equine athletes.
It was at his clinic in Santa Ynez that Johnson first met with professional barrel racer Janel Flook.
A Barrel Racer With a Broken Back
Janel Flook competing in the North State Barrel Association’s 2025 Spring Classic. Photo by Ben Petree Photography.
Flook began competing as a barrel racer at age 15. At 47, she still rides professionally and also trains younger riders at her ranch north of Paso Robles.
Early one morning in 2021, while preparing for a competition, Flook was thrown from a spooked horse and landed headfirst on asphalt. The fall left her with a badly fractured skull and her spine broken in three places.
She underwent successful brain surgery, but the neurosurgeon told her she was unlikely to walk again and certainly would never ride. Two weeks after the accident, however, Flook was able to get up on her feet, albeit with a lot of pain.
“I’d go into the barn with my walker, wearing a back brace, to feed and brush my horses,” she said. “They made me want to heal.”
In time, two of the three fractured vertebrae healed on their own, but the remaining fracture caused near constant pain.
Getting Back on the Horse
Janel Flook with J. Patrick Johnson, MD, after her surgery.
A Texas friend from the rodeo world insisted Flook go to see Johnson. The surgeon explained that Flook had a compression fracture in a vertebra in the middle of her back.
“Janel needed her spine repositioned, the vertebra removed and her column rebuilt with rods, bolts and screws,” Johnson said. “Working around the spinal cord is a high-risk, dangerous place. But I fix these things all the time, and I told her I expected a complete recovery, and that it might never cause another problem.”
Flook asked if she could postpone surgery until after the breeding season, because she handles the foaling of the breeding mares herself. Johnson acquiesced, though he told her she probably shouldn’t be doing that work with a broken back. But she managed to get through the season before her surgery.
At the hospital, Flook was nervous about the needles and IV, but the nurses eased her anxiety, and the procedure was a success.
After the operation, she could only lift two or three pounds, but Johnson told her to walk as much as possible.
“I’d walk to the barn, feed my horses, and I gradually built up my strength that way,” Flook said. “After about a month, I started physical therapy. At three months, I was cleared to ride again, which just felt amazing—like I was home.”
Four months after surgery, Flook entered an amateur-level barrel race. She’s now back competing as a pro and recently won her first post-surgery prize money in a professional rodeo.
The Right Approach
Flook and the Johnstons are particularly grateful to Johnson for his approach to their injuries, and for listening to them and understanding their needs.
“He didn’t tell me I can’t ride again. He didn’t tell me I’m crazy for even wanting to ride,” said Flook. “He just said, ‘Let’s figure out how to get you back on your horse,’ which was a huge comfort.”
“You’re talking to him, and you feel like you’re talking to somebody you were raised with on the ranch, who can connect with you on that level of where you come from,” Johnston said. “And then he can step in as a surgeon, and he knows just what you need to get you back out there. It’s a rarity.”