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  • BLA113
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    Hello Dr. Corenman,

    I am 8 weeks out post op. I am a 51 yo active woman. Prior to surgery, I was experiencing horrible left sided pain; buttock, thigh, knee, numbness in feet/toes/ankle, sciatica pain, down my left leg. Pain was worse while seated, and increasingly got worse, as I have a seated job. I couldn’t sit without my thigh/knee throbbing. As the pain got worse in my knee, I went for an X-ray, and it showed I had water on my knee. I could no longer work, due to the pain.

    Prior to this exacerbation, I had been dealing with this issue previously, but wasn’t suggested for surgery yet. I did the cortisone/steroid shots, PT, and Chiropractor. When I went for the latest MRI, it showed I had a pinched nerve (which was just bulging on the prior MRI). When I went for this second MRI (seen below). That is when the doctor suggested the microdiskectomy, and that my back has worsened. I have been dealing with sciatica pain for a few years now.

    Had the surgery on 5/28/2024. Unfortunately, I feel I haven’t really seen an improvement yet. I went for my first post op approx 4 weeks after surgery. Told my concerns to the doctor. At that point I was getting a lot of nerve pain down my legs, still very stiff, to bend/twist. Still numbness and tingling down my feet. Though the doctor told me prior to surgery, bc where the pinched nerve was, it might not help the numbness/tingling in the left foot.
    As far as the nerve pain, bc of how long I was dealing with the back pain, he felt it was normal, and the nerves are just working itself out. He said on my next visit, which is Aug 5, he will send me for PT at that time. He also told me to walk walk walk. Which I have been doing. I have no problem walking. Other than feeling very stiff, some muscle spasms, but nothing as to where I can’t walk. I try to walk 3 days a week, sometimes 4. Anywhere from 3-4 miles.

    He said, don’t sit for more than a half hour. Which is where the problem comes in. I can’t sit for more than 5-10 min without feeling excruciating sharp pain in my left hip area. I constantly have to readjust myself to relieve the hip pain. Put foot up/sit on my right side more, and extend my left leg. Hip pain probably reared its ugly head maybe 2.5 weeks ago. It feels like it’s right in the ball/joint (7-8 on pain scale). I also continue to have horrible left buttocks pain, esp in seated position/it’s a cramping/muscle spasm (6-7 pain scale). I have bilateral lower back pain in standing/seated (3-5). Which is mainly NEW since surgery. That never goes away, makes it worse by any twisting or slight bending. If I sit too long, I still continue to have nerve pain going down through buttocks, thigh, into front of knee, and still numbness in foot. I have to constantly readjust myself for the pain to subside. Though it’s not as bad as before surgery, but I also am not allowing myself to sit as long, for it to act up as much either.

    The only relief I really have for the hip, is when I’m standing, and resting with my legs out straight. I still have bilateral back pain, and buttocks pain, but it relieves the hip pain for the most part, unless I’m in a position it doesn’t like, and then it will be hurt again, until I move my position. Or if I’m sitting/laying to long, then the buttocks will start hurting.. Flexing forward irritates the hip. Even resting has its limits, and I have to get up and move eventually, but SITTING is by far the worse for me.

    Also, just to note, I have control over my bowels, but I do feel (prior too and after surgery), whenever I have a bowel movement I do feel more pain in my bilateral lower back/hip area.

    I do ice my back when I’m resting. I’m just very frustrated, and I was such an active person. I just feel I am not getting closer to where I should be. I hope I am wrong, and maybe I just need more time. Your insight would be most helpful. THANK YOU!

    Pre-surgery MRI

    Procedure: MRI LUMBAR SPINE WO CONTRAST
    Ordering Diagnosis: Spinal stenosis of lumbar region without neurogenic claudication [M48.061 (ICD-10-CM)]
    Chronic left-sided low back pain with left-sided sciatica [M54.42, G89.29 (ICD-10-CM)]
    Accession #: PRMS240742467

    Study Result
    Narrative & Impression
    EXAM: MRI LUMBAR SPINE WO CONTRAST

    HISTORY: Low back and left leg pain.

    COMPARISON: There are no studies available for comparison at this time.

    TECHNIQUE: MRI of the lumbar spine was performed without intravenous contrast utilizing sagittal inversion recovery, sagittal T1, as well as axial, sagittal, and coronal T2 weighted sequences.

    FINDINGS:

    5 nonrib-bearing lumbar type vertebral bodies are identified. With the patient laying supine, there is no scoliosis. There is no acute fracture. Vertebral body heights are maintained. The visualized distal segment of the spinal cord demonstrates normal signal and morphology. The conus medullaris terminates at the level of T12-L1.

    T12-L1: Normal posterior disc contour. No canal or foraminal stenosis. Facet joints are intact.

    L1-L2: Normal posterior disc contour. No canal or foraminal stenosis. Facet joints are intact.

    L2-L3: Left subarticular – foraminal disc protrusion results in left subarticular zone stenosis with contact/impingement of the traversing left L3 nerve root between the disc and the left facet joint. Mild canal stenosis. No right foraminal stenosis. Mild left foraminal stenosis. Facet joints are intact.

    L3-L4: Small left-sided posterior endplate osteophytes are associated with a left foraminal – extraforaminal disc protrusion. Mild canal stenosis. No right foraminal stenosis. Mild left foraminal stenosis. Mild right facet joint arthrosis. The left facet joint is intact.

    L4-L5: Mild disc bulge with mild left foraminal protrusion and associated annular fissure is noted. Mild canal stenosis. No right foraminal stenosis. Mild left foraminal stenosis. Mild bilateral facet joint arthrosis.

    L5-S1: Small left foraminal disc protrusion has associated annular fissure, with mild left foraminal stenosis. No canal or right foraminal stenosis. Minimal facet joint arthrosis.

    The sacroiliac joints are intact. The lumbar paraspinal musculature is maintained. No suspicious retroperitoneal lymphadenopathy is identified.

    IMPRESSION:

    MRI of the lumbar spine demonstrates multilevel degenerative disc disease.

    L2-L3: Left subarticular – foraminal disc protrusion results in left subarticular zone stenosis with contact/impingement of the traversing left L3 nerve root between the disc and the left facet joint.

    L3-L4: Left foraminal – extraforaminal disc protrusion.

    L4-L5: Mild disc bulge with mild left foraminal protrusion and associated annular fissure.

    L5-S1: Small left foraminal disc protrusion has associated annular fissure.

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