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  • lyndy
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    Post count: 6

    I had a motorbike accident 8 years ago. I came off and tried to save myself by putting my right leg onto the road. The impact was taken up through the right side of my spine and vertebrae. I broke my right ankle badly, sustained right shoulder damage which resulted in a frozen shoulder for 18 months, broke some ribs. I was not braced. For eight years I spent around $30,000 on specialists, tests and every type of medical diagnosis. I was in intense and constant pain but only on the right side of my spine. The pain did not localise for years and felt like intense stabbing and twisting pain.Only a few months ago a physiotherapist realised I had crushed my T5 80% on the right hand side resulting in my T4 continually slipping out to the right. After 8 years of agony she put my ribs, right shoulder and T4 back into the correct mechanical alignment and instantly relieved my pain. It felt like a miracle. It is now taped to help it stay there as my muscles try to pull it back out. All the specialists all assumed it was crushed to the front and should not be causing pain.

    Assumptions cost me a medical pension from my work place of 20 years. It also made me feel that I was going crazy. The pain was so intense I was often bedridden for many days and could not function without opioids and muscle relaxants. The first Dr I saw was old and had seen similar injuries in pilot ejections from aircraft. He was the only person who said I would have pain for the rest of my life

    Why didn’t any of at least 7 prone MRI’s, bone scans and all the other tests show up that my T5 was 80% crushed to the right and my T4 had slipped out of place? Why did every specialist make the same assumption, that it had crushed to the front. I believe this is why none of their normal testing worked on me. I understand that thoracic crush injuries through trauma are rare. I was not a text book case.

    I am asking why the tests didn’t show anything, as i would like to know but also to say sometimes trauma injuries are not textbook which was my case. It was only because one person looked outside the box and worked it out that I may have any kind of life and some pain free time.

    Is there any way to stabilise my T4 permanently? I was told that operations above the T5 level do not have good outcomes and the risks are not worth the reward as I can still walk.

    Donald Corenman, MD, DC
    Moderator
    Post count: 8660

    An AP (front to back) X-ray of the thoracic spine will reveal this scoliotic deformity. If this vertebra is angulated with an 80% deformity (one side crushed down by 80%), then this deformity will cause pain due to the angulation and normal structures around trying to compensate.

    If you have failed therapy and injections, then you might be a candidate for surgical realignment and fusion. The workup has to support this area as being a pain generator (epidurals and/or facet blocks giving temporary relief).

    If this is the case, then a reconstruction of this region should have about an 80% chance of 2/3 pain relief.

    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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