Thread: Leg Weakness
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Old 09-23-2011, 12:50 AM
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GaryA GaryA is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Mississippi
Posts: 53
10 yr Member
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Quote:
Originally Posted by firebird1979 View Post
For about a year now, I have had trouble with weakness and tightness in my thigh muscles. I have had MRI's of my keck, lower back, and brain. I have also had EMG's twice, eight month apart, All of the tests were negative for MS, ALS or any kind of nerve disorder. I also have some slight upturning of the toes on my right foot. I continue to fight it by walking 1.5mi, 2 to 3 days a week, however the walk continues to get more difficult. and I'm having some loss of size and slightly accelerated weakness in my right leg. The only thing the doctors can tell me is that during the last EMG they noticed some nerve "static" in my lower back. I've also been told thad I have some slight disc bulging in my lower L4 L5 area, but that shouldnt be causing the problems I'm having in both legs????

Any Ideas???????

I'm 50 years old, and before this started happening a year ago september I was easily running 2 miles 3 days a week and riding my bike 50mi on the weekend. I would say that my legs are now at about 65% of the strength that they were.

HELP!!!!!!!
Is there any pain associated with the weakness, any tingling or numbness? Is there any problem bringing the leg across the body? How about any problems moving the leg to the side? Any stiffness, pain or other difficulty moving the straight leg straight ahead in front of you? Is there severe tightness in your hamstrings (at the rear of the leg)?

Several possibilities occur to me. It could be compression of the nerves within the spine. But don't panic yet. Compression of the sciatic nerve by muscles beneath the gluteus maximus (your butt) create all kinds of symptoms, including muscle weakness. The chief culprit is the piriformis, a little muscle that does important work (it stabilizes the thigh). Its origin is on the sacrum, it inserts high on the femur. In 25% of the population the sciatic nerve runs right through the center of this small muscle; in everybody else the piriformis covers the nerve. When the muscle becomes hypertonic, it presses on the nerve, inhibiting interplay between brain and the many muscles of the thigh, calf and foot. And a muscle or a part of it that can't receive communication cannot fire...cannot work to its full capacity... will in fact be weaker. If the problem stems from pressure on the sciatic nerve as I suspect, a licensed massage therapist who is trained in neuromuscular therapy (NMT) can bring you relief in a few minutes.

Schedule an hour with an NMT-trained massage therapist before you do anything else. I hope your problem is not something more serious.
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