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in reply to: Residual pain or possible reherniation? #34062
Hey Doc. So it turned out to be a reherniation, much bigger than the first. I ended up having emergency surgery on the 28th because Cauda Equina was suspected.
Since the 2nd surgery, I’ve gotten continued muscle spasms when in bed whenever I try to shift over in bed. Mainly along the right hip (the opposite side of the herniation but the surgeon said the herniatoon was so big it pushed things to the right…). I had another MRI done and while there is an abutment of the left s1 nerve there isn’t any impingement.
However, in the new MRI it did say this that has me a little concerned and wondering if you could explain. It says:
There is heterogeneous low T1 signal within the bone marrow which may represent hyperplastic red marrow
from anemia. Marrow infiltrative disorder is not excluded. Laboratory correlation suggested.in reply to: Residual pain or possible reherniation? #34002Can you point me towards the study or studies that support that? I want to make sure I have something to quote if I bring up this concern with my doctor. Thanks again!
in reply to: Residual pain or possible reherniation? #34000In my PT referal the doctor has electrical stimulation checked off. I saw in some of your previous posts that this could disturb the nerve “budding”. What are your thoughts on this?
in reply to: Residual pain or possible reherniation? #33997In your experience, is my herniation bigger than most? Have you seen people regain function after such a large herniation?
My doctor wants me to start PT next week (assuming MRI is clean). I’m hoping this helps…
in reply to: Residual pain or possible reherniation? #33994Hey doc, just a quick question before my MRI on Monday. My first MRI says extruded HNP measuring 2.1 x 1.2 x 1.3 cm. That seems awfully large and has me (again) nervous about recovery. I read something about how anything over 6mm is considered severe.
Basically my question is, in your experience, is a large herniation like this typically harder to co e back from or is there little correlation? Thanks in advance
in reply to: Residual pain or possible reherniation? #33987I plan to get the MRI and post the results here.
To follow up on your original response, I read your article about nerve recovery and it’s a bit overwhelming to me. Is there a way to know what kind of nerve injury I had? Is the fact that I still can’t do a single calf raise on the effected leg a big concern? How long typically will this take to come back and is there anything I can do to help the process along? The numbness I can live with but I have a very active career and 1 year old daughter so the muscle weakness is very disheartening.
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