NeuroTalk Support Groups

NeuroTalk Support Groups (https://www.neurotalk.org/)
-   Spinal Disorders & Back Pain (https://www.neurotalk.org/spinal-disorders-and-back-pain/)
-   -   Cervical Spine MRI help (https://www.neurotalk.org/spinal-disorders-and-back-pain/197129-cervical-spine-mri-help.html)

berkeleybrain 11-14-2013 02:09 PM

Cervical Spine MRI help
 
I was rear ended in July 2012 and have had a list of issues (vision, vestibular, tingling arms/legs, radiculopathy, and now am dropping coffee cups).

I received the following MRI results:

There is reversal of the normal cervical lordosis with a kyphotic apex at c5-6.
A small round T1 hyperintensity in the C7 vetebral body displays signal loss on T2 fat sat and likely represents a hemangioma or focal fatty infiltration
C5-6/c6-7 broad-based posterior disc osteophyte complex and right uncovertebral hypertrophyt results in moderate right neuroforaminal narowing and mild spinal canal stenosis

Impression: Predominantly discogenic degeneratie changes at C5-6/6-7 where broad based posterior disc osteophyte complexes and right uncoverterbral hypertrophy result in mild to moderate right neural foraminal narowing and mild spinal canal stenosis.

is this just normal whiplash or with neurological symptoms more?
I don't have dr appointment until Dec 2 so I'm a bit worried....
Thanks!

ginnie 11-14-2013 04:09 PM

Hello Berkeeleybrain
 
Hello and welcome to Neuro Talk. I am sorry you have to go through the spinal issues. You found a great site that can help you muddle through some of the issues. There is where I landed when facing my own fusions.

With your MRI, there is one thing really good about it. None of the language used says "SEVERE". Most cases that describe the particular vertebra as severe, have the outcome of having to have surgery.

I do have a concern about the "reversal" of the normal curve of your spine at C5-6. What you don't want, is the vertebra, above that site and below that site, to continue to "lean over" on one another. Has your doctor mentioned anything about stabilizing that area?

From C5-6 to C6-7, you have a moderate hernia. That means a disk that is pushing against the nerves that run on the inside of your spine. I guess the issue is, if your doctor thinks you need surgery or not.

Do all you can do with PT and other methods of help, before you decide on a surgery. Surgery is always a last resort. The structure of the neck can be fixed to stop the reversal. I had this happen to me, and with hardware and all, much better than I was. I hope that a good resolution can be found to where you get the right treatment. I am here to listen anytime. ginnie:hug:


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 10:26 PM.

Powered by vBulletin • Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

vBulletin Optimisation provided by vB Optimise v2.7.1 (Lite) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2024 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.