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I have fusions at c5-c6, c6- c7, c7-t1.
spinal stenosis c2-3 8.7 mm c3-4 7.8 mm c4-5 7.8mm, c5-6 7.5mm c6-7 7.8 mm c7-t1 8 mm
c2-3 right side facet hypertrophy
c3-4 annular bulge posterior spondylitic ridging more prominent on right bilateral facet hypertrophy bilateral foraminal narrowing
c4-5 annular bulge posterior spondylitic ridging and bilateral foraminal narrowing
c5-6 questionabl right sidesd foraminal narrowing
c6-7 posterior spondylitic ridging bilateral foraminal narrowing
c6-t1 bilateral foraminal narrowingsymptoms right leg numbness (feels asleep), dragging r foot, tripping over r foot, r upper arm burning and achy, headaches, general neck pain
taking celebrex 200 qd lyrica 75 mg tid, welbutrin 300 mg er, fentenyl 25 mic
I have just increased the lyrica, had an epidural c3-4-5,6,7,t1 2 weeks ago with no relief.
previous surgeries fusion c5-6 1989- 75% compromise of spinal cord, 2000 fusion c6-7 w/ hardware, 2009 redo c6-7, fuse c7-t1.
I have had the leg issues since 2009 increasing over time, as is r arm and general neck pain. any suggestions?
thanks so much!
MelodyYou have had fusions at C5-T1 so those levels are not at significant risk for further cord compression. The risk with stenosis of the cervical spine is myelopathy, the slow deterioration of function of the spinal cord and central cord syndrome, the acute injury to the cord.
In either case, the cause of compression is the already narrowed canal diameter along with extension (bending the head backwards). This maneuver will further narrow the canal and “pinch” the spinal cord.
You don’t note what symptoms were preexisting (the original reason for your three level fusion) and what symptoms are new. If symptoms are stable over the last years after your surgery then the chance of myelopathy progression is less.
Also important is your lifestyle. If you are sedentary (you don’t participate in high level sports) and do not put your neck at risk (mountain biking, contact sports, horse riding, water skiing, etc.), then the risk of central cord injury is less.
Dragging the right foot (foot drop) is not typically related to your cervical spine. There might also be a lumbar spine disorder that could cause that symptom.
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. -
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