Forum Replies Created

Viewing 4 posts - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • Johnnyjasp
    Participant
    Post count: 5

    That’s good news at least. Hoping that there is some relief from the epidural and the pain I have resolved on it’s own.

    Do you think I should go to see a hip specialist for my continued pain or is it just a case of some bad luck or a damaged nerve healing very slowly??

    You have helped to ease an anxious mind. I hope you know how grateful a majority of the forum is to people like myself that have begun to lose hope.

    I have made a donation to a local charity to pay forward your kindness to me in my time of need. I hope it can help them half as much as your advice has helped ease my anxiety.

    Johnnyjasp
    Participant
    Post count: 5

    The operative report (the main parts)

    Palpitated the pedicle and then mobilized medially and the laterally with microscope. Large herniation at the disc space level. Opened a thin layer of posterior longotudinal ligament and the herniation was extracted. This was removed in multiple fragments. There was some tracking laterally that was also freed up.

    Small amount of disc and a hole in the annulus. The nerve root was completely freed.

    Everything else seems to be procedural

    Johnnyjasp
    Participant
    Post count: 5

    Original –

    l2-l3 mild disc bulge and superimposed small central disc protrusion mild canal narrowing

    L3-4 mild disc bulge and superimposed small central disc protrusion

    L4-5 diffuse disc bulge superimposed large right lateral recess-foraminal disc herniation impinging on right l5 nerve root nearing right l4 nerve root. Small left foraminal protrusion. Narrowing of the right lateral recess

    L5-s1 tiny central disc protrusion.

    Summary large right lateral recess right foraminal disc herniation l4-5 impinging on right l5 nerve root and nearing the l4 nerve root

    Newest mri 5 weeks 1 day post operative

    Lumbar vertebrae aligned in the Sagittal plane normal height and signal demonstrated. Straightening of normal lordosis is likely postural or muscular. No Instrinsic conus lesion and no evidence of conus compression

    Evidence of recent l4-5 hemilaminotomony and microdiscectomy. There is enhancing material of soft tissue intensity in the right aspect of the spinal canal and extending posteriorly through the laminotomony defect along the right aspect of the spinous process. There is evidence of a small residual right postereolatersl disc protrusion

    Mri finding is consistent with postoperative peridural and perineural fibrosis.

    Intervertebral discs at remaining levels are unremarkable and appear unchanged. No other abnormalities.

    Johnnyjasp
    Participant
    Post count: 5

    Thank you for your response … an update …After some more therapy there has been a progression of pain – it is now extremely sharp in my hip/buttock with calf/shin soreness … there is mild pain in my lower right back area but not severe.

    I have been doing extensions and have been able to find a point with pressure which makes my leg and toes tingle.

    Is it possible something went wrong during surgery? I was told that the nerve root is clear on a second opinion. The doctors know each other though and I got the feeling that he was holding back on saying he thinks something is wrong.

    The mri report also stated a “residual” protrusion. Both doctors said it would be impossible to tell if that was missed from the initial surgery and they attributed it to a new herniation.

    I’ve just lost faith in my doctor at this point and need a new doctor – however finding one that is not familiar with him has proven difficult.

    Any time I stand or sit or “elongate” my lower right back hip buttock area there is a severe shooting pain. I can not afford to stay out of work.

Viewing 4 posts - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)