Forum Replies Created

Viewing 6 posts - 7 through 12 (of 20 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • wmiller
    Participant
    Post count: 30

    Thank you. I spoke to my surgeon today (virtual appt given COVID19), and told him about it and that I also have some continued sciatica. He said the same thing–give it four more weeks. I see him in the office then (if all this has stopped by then).

    wmiller
    Participant
    Post count: 30
    in reply to: Help with MRI #31663

    Ok. I should’ve been more clear: the diagnostic injections were done on one day (he numbed S1, no relief, then L5, complete relief of leg pain). The following day, I had the injections bilaterally at L5/S1. I do not know at what level he numbed L5. I will ask to find out. So it sounds like I can get relief from this, but won’t clarify which stenosis is the pain generator?

    If the injections don’t give me long term relief (I find it difficult to stand or walk more than 10 minutes, and I’m a professor and a mom), would the surgical procedure for this be a laminectomy, even if the problem is a bulging disc? Or would it be discectomy.

    I am also asking for a new MRI, as I’ve had changes since my last one. And I’ll be submitting forms and payment to have you review. Thanks!

    wmiller
    Participant
    Post count: 30
    in reply to: Help with MRI #31657

    Thanks. I’m not sure if he did both levels for L5. I sent a message to ask.

    I am confused about surgical options (which I hope i don’t need) for foraminal and recess stenosis caused by a bulging, but not herniated, disc. A laminectomy to decompress would not get rid of the bulging disc, correct? So if it herniated I would get a discectomy (and they told me it’s very stretched and close to herniating, but trying to prevent), but if I cannot get sustained relief from injections and PT, how would stenosis be treated if the main cause was a bulging disc?

    As an update: they called me back and said he did L5/S1 only bilaterally and that the medicine would “move up and down levels.” I don’t understand how a trans foraminal injection can affect multiple levels at once. Is that even possible? I’ve had no relief after 4 days. If this continues, i should ask for an L4/L5 injection? At this point I’m ready to come to Vail!

    wmiller
    Participant
    Post count: 30
    in reply to: Help with MRI #31651

    Thanks. I’m not sure if he did both levels for L5. I sent a message to ask.

    I am confused about surgical options (which I hope i don’t need) for foraminal and recess stenosis caused by a bulging, but not herniated, disc. A laminectomy to decompress would not get rid of the bulging disc, correct? So if it herniated I would get a discectomy (and they told me it’s very stretched and close to herniating, but trying to prevent), but if I cannot get sustained relief from injections and PT, how would stenosis be treated if the main cause was a bulging disc?

    wmiller
    Participant
    Post count: 30
    in reply to: Help with MRI #31623

    Thank you. I had my injections yesterday, and he did something similar to what you suggested. He first numbed S1 (no steroid). After about 2-4 minutes they had me try to walk around and see how it felt. The back pain was no better, and I could still elicit the leg pain. So then he did the same with L5. I had some reduction in the back pain (but not all) and complete resolution of the leg pain (even touching where I usually have the pain was completely numb). So he put a steroid at L5 on both sides. He feels sure it is L5 because of this and because my EMG indicates L5.

    Is it normal for the injection of numbing medicine not to totally remove the back pain? He told me the remaining pain I was feeling there was from the disc itself, as he only injected at the nerve root. I am hoping that the steroids I had will calm not just the leg pain, but back pain also.

    wmiller
    Participant
    Post count: 30

    Thanks.
    I have injections scheduled for next week for the L4/L5 disc bulge (one level higher than my microD this past summer).

    Do you recommend rest from physical activity until this is done? I ride a stationary bike (not in aero position), and it definitely irritates it. I do not want to damage anything further, but is it typically safe to ride as long as the person can endure the pain (I’d say gets to 4/10)? I stopped coming up out of the saddle, as that irritated it a lot.

Viewing 6 posts - 7 through 12 (of 20 total)