Donald Corenman, MD, DC
Moderator
Post count: 8660

You have classic symptoms of a cervical radiculopathy. The nerve affected should be C7 (a C6-7 disc herniation affects the C7 nerve). If your symptoms are significant and you have motor weakness, surgery should be considered but if the symptoms are at this point tolerable and your motor weakness is not moderate-severe, you could consider conservative treatment including an epidural injection and physical therapy.

If the symptoms or weakness are profound, you have two choices, an ACDF or an ADR (artificial disc replacement). There are risks and benefits with both. ACDF surgery is a one time surgery that never has to be repeated when a solid fusion occurs. The results are reliable. Would you lose some motion? Maybe but I bet if you had flexion-extension films of that level, you would have very little motion so the loss of motion would be negligible.

The ADR is also a good choice but there are probable consequences down the road. ADRs will eventually wear out needing a conversion to a fusion. This might be in 2 years or 20, no one knows at this point. I have had 7 patients (from other institutions) with ADRs that needed conversion to fusion at this point. The ADR does allow motion to continue so that is the benefit. The ADR does not preserve the discs above or below.

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.