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December 11th, 2014 Neutral and Flexion – Note 5mm Movement C7-T1
Images are small but most likely do reveal the lowest level has a pseudoarthrosis. The images are not good enough to reveal instability. You cannot easily measure translation movement from reading off the tips of the spinous processes.
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.My sincere thanks for your esteemed opinion. The images linked are of poor quality as they derived from digital camera pictures of screenshots off the monitor to illustrate the change in distances of the tips of the C7-T1 spinous processes. The ImaSight CD Viewer program I was provided won’t export images directly with or without annotations.
These may be off slightly better quality, as they are jpeg exports from the viewer, but the DICOM images would be best for a more complete diagnosis.
I do believe you have a pseudoarthrosis at C7-T1. I cannot tell from the flexion-extensions if you have instability. Without significant neck pain, this might not be an issue. WIth moderate-significant pain, this could be the pain generator.
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.Dr. Corenman,
This link will take you to the better quality, though still JPEG images mentioned in my previous post with additional views, from which you may be able to provide a more certain diagnosis, though I would like to provide you with the DICOM images on CDROM at some time in the very near future as well as a fairly recent MRI. (05/31/2013)There are 10 plain X-ray views linked. Please do comment if these images allow you to make a certain diagnosis of both non-union and instability at the C7-T1 level.
Additionally, when I place my fingertip on/between the spinous processes at this level I feel limited rotational movement along with some catching when looking from extreme left to right or vise versa.
The link above will take the viewer to 10 X-ray views of my cervical and upper thoracic spine (absent any personal information) that demonstrate the impact of pain and instability on the spine of a instrumented (Codman plate) non-union of 14 years duration at the C7-T1 level. Though I have some neurological deficits that are permanent in the form of reduced left sided arm reflexes and left sided arm and shoulder pain, the majority of my neurological symptoms are intermittent, dependent upon position, posture, muscle spasms and recent activities.
Most of the pain I endure regardless of activity is in the back of the neck and my upper back between the shoulder blades, which is chronic and limiting and interferes with getting sufficient sleep and exercise.
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