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  • Kmmom
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    Post count: 1

    I’d appreciate any advice about my current cervical spine issues. Are there other options besides a multi-level fusion? I see my neurosurgeon again on 6/17, & hope to have educated questions to ask him. History: At age 49(March 2013) I woke with a stiff neck, found I had 60% spinal cord compression by a herniated disc, and 7/2013 had c5-c6 ACDF surgery & a Medtronic Peek implant. Other discs were not in great shape, but we hoped any future surgery would be years later, not months. I’ve been participating in my neurosurgeon’s recommended Pilates/PT & continue to do so to strengthen core. All was well until 8 months later, March 2014, when I began experiencing stabbing pain, aching, & muscle spasms in my trapezius/shoulder area, and down into my left elbow. Acupuncture, massage, muscle relaxant, & Celebrex have not worked. The current MRI shows:
    Straightening & slight kyphosis at C3 unchanged from pre ACDF surgery.
    Cervical spinal cord has normal signal.
    Degenerative signal developing within each cervical disc w/ mild C3-4 & moderate C4-5 disc space narrowing.
    C2-3: no central or foraminal stenosis despite mild uncinate & facet hypertrophy.
    C3-4: asymmetric left severe uncinate hypertrophy causing severe left foraminal stenosis. Disc spur complex causing mild to moderate stenosis w/ trace effacement of anterior left cord. Right foraminal stenosis minimal.
    C4-5: uncinate & facet hypertrophy causing severe left & moderate right foraminal stenosis. Disc spur complex w/ minimal broad-based disc bulge causing moderate central stenosis & mild effacement of left cord.
    C5-6: no residual central or foraminal stenosis post ACDF & fusion.(7/2014 surgery)
    C6-7: uncinate & facet hypertrophy causing mild bilateral foraminal stenosis. Disc spur complex causing mild to moderate central stenosis. 2mm broad based disc bulge present.
    C7-t1: no central or foraminal stenosis.(yeah!)

    Any input, suggestions about future procedures, advice would be greatly appreciated. Thank you in advance, Sue

    Donald Corenman, MD, DC
    Moderator
    Post count: 8660

    You have two separate problems in your neck. These are radiculopathy (pinched nerve) and central stenosis (narrowing of the spinal canal). The treatment you choose depends upon your activity level, type of activity and what risks you are willing to live with.

    Your current complaint of shoulder/arm pain (“I began experiencing stabbing pain, aching, & muscle spasms in my trapezius/shoulder area, and down into my left elbow”) is most likely from foraminal stenosis (pinched nerve-see website).

    At C4-5, the radiologist reports severe left foraminal stenosis (“uncinate & facet hypertrophy causing severe left & moderate right foraminal stenosis”). This could be causing your current pain but this is pinching of the C5 nerve. This nerve normally radiates pain into the upper arm and not all the way into the elbow.

    You can determine if this is the painful nerve by undergoing a SNRB (selective nerve root block-see website). You must keep a pain diary (see website) to determine if this is the pain generator.

    The central stenosis is another matter. You have no reported cord problems and there is no signal change noted by the radiologist (“Cervical spinal cord has normal signal”). You do have some risk of cord problems if you take a fall (see central cord syndrome) or you could develop myelopathy (again see website). The risks are greater if you participate in activities that could cause head impact.

    If you do not participate in these types of activities (mtn biking, surfing, horseback riding, etc..), your risk is not as great. You can possibly ameliorate your risk by strengthening your anterior neck muscles (SCMs-see neck sit-ups on the website) but this has not been studied.

    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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