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  • Donald Corenman, MD, DC
    Moderator
    Post count: 8660

    Please forward your images to my office. Call (970) 476-1100 and ask for one of my nurses.

    Dr. Corenman

    PLEASE REMEMBER, THIS FORUM IS MEANT TO PROVIDE GENERAL INFORMATION ON SPINE ANATOMY, CONDITIONS AND TREATMENTS. TO GET AN ACCURATE DIAGNOSIS, YOU MUST VISIT A QUALIFIED PROFESSIONAL IN PERSON.
     
    Donald Corenman, MD, DC is a highly-regarded spine surgeon, considered an expert in the area of neck and back pain. Trained as both a Medical Doctor and Doctor of Chiropractic, Dr. Corenman earned academic appointments as Clinical Assistant Professor and Assistant Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, and his research on spine surgery and rehabilitation has resulted in the publication of multiple peer-reviewed articles and two books.
    hart
    Member
    Post count: 34

    Dear Dr. Corenman:

    WOW. Thanks.

    I will ring tomorrow about sending my films along. If it’s a re-herniation, maybe we can write it up — a first for the literature ;) More important to me though, is to understand this and not have a recurrence, be it the second, third or whatever. I suppose I am encouraged that there is less material to herniate now, less jelly at least. The idea of the tough stuff herniating is a bit scary though. While not strictly indicated, I’m keen to get this re-imaged.

    The thoracic spine is especially stable, right? So will I have to worry as much about narrowing of the vertebral space and vertebral displacement with the loss of disc material?

    Cheers

    hart
    Member
    Post count: 34

    Hi Dr. Corenman:

    I have yet to get my films to you. Sorry! But I now have another film. I ran home and looked at the study and I didn’t see the protrusion. The black blob was gone! Every level looked the same — that’s about my level of expertise ;)

    I had the study today and we heard from the radiologist tonight. A completely normal T-spine MRI at 10 months! He and his colleagues (one of them the radiologist who read the old film back in January) have never seen or heard of such a “disappearance” in the T-spine. They have seen such findings in L-spine herniations on occasion. After taking a look at the old MRI, they returned to today’s study and decided just maybe there was a little something to be seen. Essentially normal. I await written report.

    I am not 100% but I guess my MRI is! Of course, we know it is still a crappy disc! WOW…normal MRI…is this an especially good thing or just an interesting finding?

    I will send you the films! Thank you for your enlightening discussion of etiology. You are the only person who has been willing (?able) to discuss possible explanations for this “injury”.

    Cheers,
    Hart

    PS. So does this make me like one in a BILLION? Ha. I do realize that the “one in a million” number has been thrown into question and that symptomatic T-spine herniations are probably not as rare as once thought!

    hart
    Member
    Post count: 34

    Got the report…

    IMPRESSION:

    1. THE PRIOR EXAM OF 01/04/11 SHOWED A LARGE FAR RIGHT LATERAL DISC EXTRUSION WITH CEPHALAD MIGRATION OF THE EXTRUDED DISC. THIS AREA HAS SHOWN REMARKABLE IMPROVEMENT SINCE THE LAST EXAM WITH NOW ONLY A 3MM RIGHT LATERAL PROTRUSION AND NO DEFINED NERVE ROOT COMPRESSION.

    2. MILD MULTILEVEL DEGENERATIVE DISC DISEASE WITH ENDPLATE SPONDYLOSIS AND SMALL SCHMORL NODE DEFECTS T7-8 THROUGH T10-11.

    3. MINOR 1MM POSTERIOR ANULAR BULGING T8-9, T10-11 AND T11-12

    4. STABLE APPEARANCE OF A SMALL BENIGN SIGNAL ABNORMALITY WITHIN THE ANTERIOR T9 VERTEBRAL BODY.

    Donald Corenman, MD, DC
    Moderator
    Post count: 8660

    The report that the new MRI is now “normal” is suspicious. The previous report noted not only the large extruded fragment but multiple areas with “MINOR 1MM POSTERIOR ANULAR BULGING T8-9, T10-11 AND T11-12”. These do not just “go away” but if the MRI was performed in such a manner that the image resolution was poor or the machine was of low quality, the findings can be different.

    Dr. Corenman

    PLEASE REMEMBER, THIS FORUM IS MEANT TO PROVIDE GENERAL INFORMATION ON SPINE ANATOMY, CONDITIONS AND TREATMENTS. TO GET AN ACCURATE DIAGNOSIS, YOU MUST VISIT A QUALIFIED PROFESSIONAL IN PERSON.
     
    Donald Corenman, MD, DC is a highly-regarded spine surgeon, considered an expert in the area of neck and back pain. Trained as both a Medical Doctor and Doctor of Chiropractic, Dr. Corenman earned academic appointments as Clinical Assistant Professor and Assistant Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, and his research on spine surgery and rehabilitation has resulted in the publication of multiple peer-reviewed articles and two books.
    hart
    Member
    Post count: 34

    Hi Dr. Corenman:

    Sorry about the confusion! That is the new report. The machine and one of the radiologists were the same in both studies. The MRI was performed on a GE High Field 1.5 Tesla Signa Infinity Excite. I read that 3T is out there on the street but the machine in question seems pretty typical. I have sussed out the radiologists involved. I feel like I stumbled on some pretty good ones. I deliberately went back to the same machine and asked for the same neuroradiologist, a young doctor with an impressive CV. I got a different radiologist this time, an older guy without the “neuro” in “radiologist”, a former flight surgeon who served as director of the radiology residency program at Presbyterian/Saint Luke’s Medical Center in Denver for a decade. He did consult the radiologist who read the initial film. They found the change remarkable. The radiologists received detailed “orders” for both these studies. In the event that the study was inadequate for whatever reason, wouldn’t the radiologist report it as such and recommend further imaging?

    To review:

    04 JAN 2011 — the initial study reported by the young neuroradiologist

    IMPRESSION: T9-T10 RIGHT SUBARTICULAR ZONE LARGE DISC EXTRUSION EXTENDING 4.7 MM POSTERIORLY AND 10 MM SUPERIORLY WITH RIGHT LATERAL RECESS STENOSIS AND MASS EFFECT ON THE EXITING RIGHT T9 NERVE

    Reported elsewhere: “A focal T10 inferior endplate defect is compatible with a Schmorl’s node as well as at T12 superior endplate.” “Remaining thoracic levels demonstrate no significant disc herniation or central canal stenosis.”

    08 NOV 2011 — the follow up study reported by the older radiologist who, BTW, reports more Schmorl’s nodes than the first radiologist in addition to posterior bulging in the lower levels of the T-spine.

    IMPRESSION:
    1. THE PRIOR EXAM OF JAN/04/11 SHOWED A LARGE FAR RIGHT LATERAL DISC EXTRUSION WITH CEPHALAD MIGRATION OF THE EXTRUDED DISC. THIS AREA HAS SHOWN REMARKABLE IMPROVEMENT SINCE THE LAST EXAM WITH NOW ONLY A 3MM RIGHT LATERAL PROTRUSION AND NO DEFINED NERVE ROOT COMPRESSION.

    2. MILD MULTILEVEL DEGENERATIVE DISC DISEASE WITH ENDPLATE SPONDYLOSIS AND SMALL SCHMORL NODE DEFECTS T7-8 THROUGH T10-11.

    3. MINOR 1MM POSTERIOR ANULAR BULGING T8-9, T10-11 AND T11-12

    4. STABLE APPEARANCE OF A SMALL BENIGN SIGNAL ABNORMALITY WITHIN THE ANTERIOR T9 VERTEBRAL BODY.

    Elsewhere in the report: “Discs: Moderate disc desiccation and mild degenerative thinning multiple interspaces to include T7-8 through T10-11. This is unchanged in appearance.”

    So “normal” was my doing! It is not REALLY normal. But if we were to round up healthy more or less normal 40 somethings on the street who never complained of back pain, could we find such? If degenerative disease is normal aging as some argue, after a certain age, a normal MRI would not be possible. So what exactly is a normal MRI at age 45 or 55 or 65?

    1mm posterior bulges? I have watched your videos on MRI which are very good. And looked at some normal MRIs. Discs look a bit bulge-y all stacked up between the vertebrae, to this casual observer. Those 1mm bulges were not reported on the previous film but the radiologist who read the followup film points out that they are unchanged from the previous film. This suggests to me that they are on the threshold of reportable findings.

    Yesterday, Friday PM, I left a message with Diana in your office with my details.

    Cheers,
    Hart

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