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Old 11-03-2010, 08:24 PM #21
arkiegal0704 arkiegal0704 is offline
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arkiegal0704 arkiegal0704 is offline
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I was reading your note's and I noticed a cyst on your spinal cord. Has anyone said you might have Syringomyelia? I was told in 92 that I had Syringomyelia which is cyst or tumor's in your spinal cord.
Sharon
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Old 11-11-2010, 09:48 AM #22
LindaWing LindaWing is offline
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Originally Posted by arkiegal0704 View Post
I was reading your note's and I noticed a cyst on your spinal cord. Has anyone said you might have Syringomyelia? I was told in 92 that I had Syringomyelia which is cyst or tumor's in your spinal cord.
Sharon
No I have never been told that. It seems that noone wants to discuss my MRI results. I have brought it up to my Neuro dr and my pain dr and noone has been wanting to discuss it.
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Old 11-21-2010, 11:36 PM #23
Dubious Dubious is offline
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I was involved in a pretty severe car accident where I was hit by a drunk driver. It happened May 15, 2009 and I just recently had an MRI done. I received the results along with my neuro doc and he did not mention anything was wrong. So I am open to someone else to helping me understand the content.

Comparison: None

Technique: An MRI of the cervical spine was obtained utilizing sagittal T1, sagittal T2, and selected axial gradient echo images without the administration of intravenous contrast.

Findings: There is straightening if the normal cervical largest cyst. Disc desiccation is seen from C2-3 through C6-7. Disc space narrowing is seen at C5-6,C6-7, and C7-T1. tiny anterior osteophytes are present at multiple levels. The vertebral body heights and alignment are well preserved. no signal abnormality is seen within visualized marrow cavities. The visualized portion of the spianal cord appears normal. No soft tissue masses are seen.

From C2-3 to C4-5 the disc. thecal sac, and neural foramina are normal.

At C5-6 small posterior marginal osteophytes are present. The AP diameter of the thecal sac and the neural foramen are normal.

At C6-7 and C7-T1 the disc, thecal sac, and neural foramen are normal.

Impression: Minimal Degenerative Disc Disease at C5-6 with no central spinal canal stenosis or neuroforaminal narrowing seen.



So with all of this info CAN SOMEONE PLEASE HELP ME FIGURE THIS OUT!

I think it should read "straightening of the normal cervical lordosis." It is an otherwise relatively normal report bar a few degenerative issues. Multiple studies have shown that MRI is not a good imaging modality to "prove" pain associated with cervical accelleration-decelleration injuries. For example, subligamentous failure (stretched/severely sprained ligament) looks entirely normal on MRI. BTW, 89% of the time, reduced or reversed lordosis is associated with a history of trauma.

I am all for a chiro. Get an expert in whiplash associated disorders at www.srisd.com
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Old 11-22-2010, 01:09 AM #24
peterpan peterpan is offline
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Default Cervical MRI explained

LindaWing, To be honest, I am a doctor of Chiropractic. I look at and explain MRI reports all the time. It is always O.K. to ask for the results of any tests and ask your doctors to explain anything you don't understand. (your friends and the internet are full of mis-information).

In general, your MRI is basically normal and the radiologist is just listing normal findings in regards to the position and condition of bones, nerves, discs etc. As for the exact meanings of all this terminology, you can ask your doctor (but it takes a lot of time to explain), research the internet for anatomy terms, or trust his advice and don't stress over this MRI report.

To end the confusion, I am 100% sure that the first sentence should read "There is straightening of the normal cervical curve" There had to be an typographical error in transcription, it makes not sense, is out of usual order, and the cyst would be mentioned in the "impression" section again.

Trying to be brief, the numbers are anatomical code for the location of the finding. "C" is used when referring to the cervical region or neck. "T" is used for the thoracic region (ribs attach here), and "L" is lumbar. The numbers following the letter refer to what vertebra in that region counted from the top down. The next term is "Disc dessication". You can think of that as the dehydration of the fibrous and gelatinous spacers located between spinal bones formally known as intervertebral discs. They dehydrate as a consequence of long standing compressional stress such as that from gravity. This process is called degenerative disc disease or osteoarthritis and is accelerated with additional stress such as from abnormal function, injury, muscle spasms, poor posture, nutrition, lack of water intake, etc. The terms "tiny anterior osteophytes", is a descriptive term for, in your case, the small little spurs along the top or bottom of a vertebra (spinal bone) that result from stresses on the spine. It too is part of degenerative disc disease. (The cause is known as "wolf's law" and as tension increases on the attachment points of the disc, the bone remodels, laying calcium in the area making a spur.) Over time, if the cause is not corrected, they can grow to be very large. Yours are "tiny" and this is excellent. It means this is the earliest stages of osteoarthritis and the prognosis is better.....

I am going on too long for this venue so I will end here with the advice to always ask questions and demand answers. It is your body and you deserve to know. In my humble opinion, if this were one of my patient's MRI report, I would say this is good news. I wish you well.
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Old 11-24-2010, 12:18 AM #25
Dubious Dubious is offline
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Originally Posted by peterpan View Post
LindaWing, To be honest, I am a doctor of Chiropractic. I look at and explain MRI reports all the time. It is always O.K. to ask for the results of any tests and ask your doctors to explain anything you don't understand. (your friends and the internet are full of mis-information).

In general, your MRI is basically normal and the radiologist is just listing normal findings in regards to the position and condition of bones, nerves, discs etc. As for the exact meanings of all this terminology, you can ask your doctor (but it takes a lot of time to explain), research the internet for anatomy terms, or trust his advice and don't stress over this MRI report.

To end the confusion, I am 100% sure that the first sentence should read "There is straightening of the normal cervical curve" There had to be an typographical error in transcription, it makes not sense, is out of usual order, and the cyst would be mentioned in the "impression" section again.

Trying to be brief, the numbers are anatomical code for the location of the finding. "C" is used when referring to the cervical region or neck. "T" is used for the thoracic region (ribs attach here), and "L" is lumbar. The numbers following the letter refer to what vertebra in that region counted from the top down. The next term is "Disc dessication". You can think of that as the dehydration of the fibrous and gelatinous spacers located between spinal bones formally known as intervertebral discs. They dehydrate as a consequence of long standing compressional stress such as that from gravity. This process is called degenerative disc disease or osteoarthritis and is accelerated with additional stress such as from abnormal function, injury, muscle spasms, poor posture, nutrition, lack of water intake, etc. The terms "tiny anterior osteophytes", is a descriptive term for, in your case, the small little spurs along the top or bottom of a vertebra (spinal bone) that result from stresses on the spine. It too is part of degenerative disc disease. (The cause is known as "wolf's law" and as tension increases on the attachment points of the disc, the bone remodels, laying calcium in the area making a spur.) Over time, if the cause is not corrected, they can grow to be very large. Yours are "tiny" and this is excellent. It means this is the earliest stages of osteoarthritis and the prognosis is better.....

I am going on too long for this venue so I will end here with the advice to always ask questions and demand answers. It is your body and you deserve to know. In my humble opinion, if this were one of my patient's MRI report, I would say this is good news. I wish you well.

Peterpan,

Couldn't agree with your post anymore! I'm a DABCO (and gone through a C5-6 fusion, shoulder recontsruction leading to brachial plexopathy and CRPS), I can relate!

Take care
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