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23y/M concerned about back problems
Well I am in the army and have been in for about 4 years now and just got my MRI results back on my back pain and found out I have Degenerative disk disease, Arthritic bone spurs, disk touching my spinal cord, a torn disk and I think something like a nodule on my vertebrae. Now this is all in my thoracic spine area and have to see a Neurosurgeon and a Orthopedic surgeon. Does anyone have any advice of what to expect and knowledge to take with me? I am worried this is the end of my Army Career. any tips advice or encouragement would be greatly appreciated. :confused:
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Hi hummer479...OUCH :eek: to say the least!!! There are a lot of people in this community with similar problems. And I hope some of them will come here and offer some support. First off, let me thank you for your service in the Army!!!!
I have DDD as well and other difficulties. It is a long road of discovery, to find out what will work best for you. Make sure you have good docs...if you end up having to have surgery make sure the surgeon has a lot of experience. Make sure they are up on the latest treatment possibilites. I wonder about that nodule...:confused: I had a herniated disc in my neck and the level above that is bulging. The herniated disc was compressing the spinal cord and a spinal nerve. I was experiencing nerve damage in my right arm and could not use it at all. Needless to say the pain was awful. Surgery seemed to be the only choice. And it worked. That was almost 3 years ago and I can now use that arm without difficulty (except for a shoulder that is falling apart :eek:). Anyway, there are a lot of ways to deal with this, so hang in there. I understand that scary feeling about what is next???? I am sure you will get other ideas. :hug: Take care, I will be checking back in...... |
I don't have DDD but did have problems with discs, bone spurs etc pressing on lower spinal cord. For 15 yrs or so I had only minor and tolerable nerve pain in legs, but two years ago things suddenly worsened: mobility became a big problem, neuropathuc pain much worse, and bowel problems.
I had an emergency spinal decompression operation to trim discs, remove bone spurs etc. This stopped the pressure on nerve, removed bowel probs and otherwise stabilised the situation i.e. now very poor walking ability and continuous neuropathic pain. It seems that the pressure on spinal cord resulted in softening of the nerve(myelomalacia) which I'm told is irreversible. Wish I had had the op earlier... But DDD is a different dimension. |
Hi Colin Street, its nice to meet you. I am sorry you had such a difficult problem. I have seen this happen to one of my patients (have been in nursing). It is really a hard thing to go through. I am glad you have gotten back what function that you have. I think that can be the way it is with spinal problems. My neck was that way. I dealt with it for many years and then, Boom, it really blew. I will be stopping back by here in a few days. You might find some of the information in the vitamin forum helpful. There are some good threads there now on nerve problems. I know that different things work for different people. Thank you for the info you put out here. Take care! :)
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Thanks for some light on this subject
I would like to thank you all for your post's on my subject and I will be seeing a Orthopedic Surgeon next week on the 4th and I will post a update to see what he says and recommends for a treatment. I am just worried about being operated on near my spinal cord. Colin Street what was your recovery time after your surgery and what was it kinda like if you don't mind sharing? Once again thanks for the posting on my subject :-).
Jon |
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My operation didn't leave me in any more pain than before, i.e. no pain as an effect of the operation, only the NP I had had before. Came off the drips quite quicly and I was able to walk, albeit slowly and uncertainly, with sticks after 3 or 4 days (and I am neither young nor specially fit). I would probably have been fearful if I had had time to think about it but the op. was done more or less as an emergency. They did laminectomy, removed some fatty tissue, and trimmed disc(s). Looking at it from this end, the experience of the op/recovery wasn't bad at all. They did keep me in for a while after the op. but that may have been in part because I have no-one to help at home. As for success, it did restore some important control but by no means accomplished all I, and the doctors, had hoped for. Though I wish I had had the operation earlier, I think things had gone too far by the time I got to the table. Whilst it is hardly a routine operation, the surgeon (and I don't think I do him an injustice by saying he is not a world renowned specialist) didn't seem to think it posed any great risks. |
Do your level best to take this one day at a time. I am sooooo sorry to hear that you are having these problems, especially at such a young age. It sounds like you are pre-disposed to degenerative problems and this situation is not work related.
The surgery will not be as bad as you think. The worst part is the diagnostic stage.........all of that pre-op foreplay. As far as your military career is concerned, it depends on what your specialty is and your level of function post op. Don't hesitate to request retraining in a different speicalty if that will salvage a career. Best wishes. |
Disk Touching my spinal cord
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