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  • Mpneagle
    Participant
    Post count: 11

    Hello Dr. Corenman

    I sustained some cervical spine trauma on 5/14 while in the ICU I had an MRI done on the cervical region. I was in a hard collar for 7 weeks while under the care of a neurosurgeon. I have been released from the collar but I am having some lingering issues with muscle weakness mainly in the left shoulder (deltoid, infraspinatus, etc) which creates some range of motion issues mainly arm elevation/extension. I am currently in physical therapy to work on these issues. However, I would love some input from you on my MRI results if possible. I assume I am suffering from a c5/6 nerve root impingement. I also did complete an EMG study and its results basically just stated nerve “damage”. of the deltoid, bicep, tricep, infraspinatus. Just looking to become more educated on my issue and seek the best course of action. It seems the doctor is using the wait and see approach are you in agreement with this?

    Thank you for your time:

    COMPARISON: Cervical spine CT 05,14,2017
    FINDINGS:
    Straightening of the cervical lordosis. Displaced fracture of the C6 spinous
    process identified. Bone marrow edema within the left posterior elements of C7
    corresponding to the nondisplaced fractures on prior CT. No acute vertebral
    subluxation identified. Partially imaged acute T4 and T5 compression fractures
    with bone marrow edema.
    The cervical cord demonstrates normal signal intensity. No evidence of cord
    contusion or acute cord edema.
    C2-3: The disk is preserved height. No significant disk protrusion, spinal
    canal or foraminal stenosis.
    C3-4: Mild disk height loss. Uncovertebral osteophytes with moderate left
    foraminal narrowing. Broad disk osteophyte complex with borderline, mild
    spinal canal narrowing. The AP thecal sac diameter measures 9 mm.
    C4-5: Moderate disk height loss. 4 mm broad disk osteophyte complex narrows
    the ventral thecal sac and indents the anterior cord surface. There is mild to
    moderate spinal canal stenosis. AP thecal sac diameter measures 7 mm.
    Uncovertebral osteophytes cause moderate right and mild left foraminal
    narrowing.
    C5-6: 3 mm central disk protrusion indents the ventral thecal sac mild to
    moderate spinal canal stenosis. No significant foraminal narrowing.
    C6-7: Left central 4 mm disk protrusion compresses the left ventral cord
    surface without evidence of acute cord edema. There is mild spinal canal
    stenosis. Mild to moderate left foraminal narrowing.
    C7-T1: The disk is preserved height. No significant disk protrusion, spinal
    canal or foraminal stenosis.
    Extensive interspinous and paraspinous soft tissue edema is seen.
    IMPRESSION:
    Displaced fracture of the C6 spinous process.
    Bone marrow edema within the left posterior elements of C7 corresponds to the
    nondisplaced fractures on prior CT. No acute vertebral subluxation identified.
    Partially imaged acute T4 and T5 compression fractures with bone marrow edema.
    Extensive interspinous and paraspinous soft tissue edema is related to
    high-grade cervical interspinous and paraspinous ligamentous injury.
    No acute cord contusion or cord edema.
    Multilevel degenerative changes with mild to moderate spinal canal stenosis
    C4-5, C5-6 and C6-7 as detailed.

    I look forward to your reply. If more information is required for better analysis please let me know…

    Mpneagle
    Participant
    Post count: 11

    Hello again Dr. Corenman I thought I would add one of the many MRI static images that I was provided for help if needed.

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