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Spinal Disorders & Back Pain For discussion of all spinal cord injuries, spinal issues, back-related pain or problems. |
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#1 | ||
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New Member
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First off I want to say that I am so glad I found this forum! Thanks to Alffe for pointing me here to the right place
![]() I injured my back last month and have been having horrible pain and numbness. My doctor ordered a MRI and I got the report back but I just can't understand it. It looks like it might be pretty serious but I am not sure can any one please help me I am very scared. Here is what the MRI report said. Findings: The caudal most lumbar type vertebra is labeled L5. Vertebral body heights, alignment and marrow signal are normal. Degenerative discogenic changes are noted at the L5-S1 level.The conus terminates at the L1 level. The cauda equina is normal in morphology. The paraspinal muscles are symmetric. L1-L2: No disc herniation,neural forminal stenosis or spinal stenosis. L2-L3: No disc herniation,neural forminal stenosis or spinal stenosis. L3-L4: No disc herniation,neural forminal stenosis or spinal stenosis. L4-L5: Note is made of concentric annular bulge without significant neural formanil or spinal stenosis. L5-S1: Note is made of a broad-based central disc protrusion causing moderate left and mild right subarticular stenosis. Disc protrusion contacts the descending left S1 nerve root. Neural formina are patent. No significant central spinal stenosis. IMPRESSION: 1. Central disc protrusion at the L5-S1 level causing moderate left subarticular stenosis. Disc protrusion contacts the descending left S1 nerve root. Thank you! |
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#2 | |||
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Legendary
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First, I am not a doctor nor do I have a radiology background, so am only giving information from my own knowledge base. Your doctor should explain your scan results to you in detail.
Basically it says your back is fine down to the base of your lumbar area/top of your tail-bone area, but at this level you have what some call a 'slipped-disk'. Each of our vertebrae have their own name and number according to their area in the spine. For example, L1 means the first spinal bone in the lumbar region. When the numbers quoted are between two vertebrae. eg. L1/L2, it's actually the space between the bones, or the disks that are being discussed. L5/S1 refers to the disk between the last (or 5th) Lumbar vertebrae and the first Sacral one. Between each bone in our back (vertebra) we have thick disks filled with gel which act as shock-absorbers, and those disks in turn are covered with a thick material called the annulus (annulus means 'around the outside'). Over the years these disks start to wear out and flatten, or possibly bulge out (like squashing a marshmallow) which is what has happened to you in your L5/S1 area. With conditions of this type you'd probably find physio beneficial in easing the low back pain that I'm sure you have. I hope that's helped and if you need any further information, there are some good web sites that help you understand your own reports. Here's one I found fairly easy to follow.. http://www.radiologyassistant.nl/en/4556dea65db62
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Eastern Australian Daylight Savings Time and my temperature . |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | Bobbi (08-22-2009) |
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#3 | ||
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New Member
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Thank you very much!
My doctor didn't explain any of it to me I was just told I had a herniated disc. I was finally able to get into another doctor yesterday and they are sending me to a surgeon so I have my fingers crossed that all goes well. |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | Koala77 (08-20-2009) |
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#4 | ||
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Also if your numb you may act in ways that will cause more permanent damage. I went surfing and now have permanent pain and Im only 30; this wouldnt have happened had I just taken 6 months off and dedicated myself to physical therapy 100%. Hope that helps. |
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#5 | ||
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Junior Member
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Back in 1987 I had an 8mm L5 herniation without much numbness in my legs and didn't have surgery. Its was very tough but mine got better. I took a year off work. My faith helped me. I am now facing a 3 level fusion but thats another story. Steroids can help. Have your doctors talked about an injection or other conservative treatments first before surgery?
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#6 | |||
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Always, always, ALWAYS go conservative first. Spinal surgery is risky.
Go to a pain specialist. There are many treatments they can do first. I have two disc bulges at L1/L2 and L2/L3 caused by two slip and falls 15 years ago. They deteriorated over the years, now I have arthritic changes on the facet surfaces. When aggravated by a fall that broke my left leg, I had to have separate treatment on my back. First was phisio. Then epidural injections with low dose opiates to manage the pain. Gradually the compression wouldn't go away. Eventually I had a procedure called a Radio Frequency Ablation where they sever the nerves that send the pain signal to the brain. One for each vertebrae. It is minimally invasive and works. No pain. Not sure if this is the prescription for your injury, but pain specialists have many options. I would put surgery last on the list. Best of luck.
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HoneyButter . |
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#8 | ||
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Junior Member
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From personal experience I believe that you do have to be very careful any time you have a protusion in contact with the nerve. Since I was in the military, the first thing I did when I contracted serious back pain was try to gut it out with the over the counter pain meds from the drugstore. When the pain became so bad that I could not walk more than ten steps, I went to the doctor who had me visit a neurosurgeon who took the first MRI. The insurance company insisted on physical therapy to see if they could avoid paying for a surgery. Finally, 29 days after the excruciating pain began, I was placed in surgery where the disc was removed. The surgeon said it had exploded into pieces. One piece was really pressing into the nerve. Well, that was 1990. Four months later, I deployed to Desert Shield/Desert Storm as a soldier. But, almost twenty years later, my left leg and foot still give me all sorts of trouble with ache, weakness and poor response to nerve tests. limp constantly. I'm pretty sure the lingering affects are due to the piece of disc protuding into the nerve for so long.
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