Vental Cord Flattening ?

Posted by pink lady @pinktummy, Aug 25 6:05am

I went in on 08/22/24 for an MRI of the cervical & lumbar spine and the results say: "Mild spinal canal stenosis with VENTRAL CORD FLATTENING" ( what does that mean !!? ) from my C5 to T1 vertebrae, the brachial plexus. I have a herniated disc at C6-C7, and this ventral cord flattening is new as compared to a prior MRI from 02/20/2023.
I tried to research the term but I am confused, can anyone please help explain what this is, etc. !!??

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@pinktummy, There is another discussion that I think might answer your question and provide you with some answers.
-- flattening of cervical spinal cord from bone spurs: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/flattening-of-cervical-spinal-cord-from-bone-spurs/

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@johnbishop

@pinktummy, There is another discussion that I think might answer your question and provide you with some answers.
-- flattening of cervical spinal cord from bone spurs: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/flattening-of-cervical-spinal-cord-from-bone-spurs/

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That is where I started and no such luck, but Thank You !

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@pinklady
Ventral refers to the anterior portion. Something is pressing on the front side of the spinal cord. And it looks to be that herniated disc mildly flatening the spinal cord. So the disc (that may already have been herniated check the previous MRimages report), is extruding further and pressing aginst the spinal cord at C6-C7.
If you are having pain or functional difficulty , you may want to consider surgery.
We like questions so if you have more or this is unclear continue this search for answers.
https://www.spine-health.com/conditions/spine-anatomy/all-about-c6-c7-spinal-motion-segment

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@gently

@pinklady
Ventral refers to the anterior portion. Something is pressing on the front side of the spinal cord. And it looks to be that herniated disc mildly flatening the spinal cord. So the disc (that may already have been herniated check the previous MRimages report), is extruding further and pressing aginst the spinal cord at C6-C7.
If you are having pain or functional difficulty , you may want to consider surgery.
We like questions so if you have more or this is unclear continue this search for answers.
https://www.spine-health.com/conditions/spine-anatomy/all-about-c6-c7-spinal-motion-segment

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Okay, maybe I can get some answers there !?? Thank You

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@pinktummy
I am a 55 year old female who has congenital cervical/neck and lumbar/low back spinal stenosis. I also have degenerative disc disease and osteoarthritis in my spine.

Like you, I had spinal cord flattening but at C5-C6. My symptoms were constant neck/shoulder pain, daily headaches, weak arms/hands that caused me to drop things and made my handwriting terrible. My bladder control was significantly affected where I of a sudden had daily wet underwear where this never happened before (as a female, they will first blame age, having a baby or peri/menopause and prescribe oxybutinin as a bandaid), and difficulty walking (felt like I had cement boots on).

What I didn’t know then but I know now is flattening means spinal cord compression injury. This can permanently damage your spinal cord but also affect blood supply up and down. This is an urgent need to consider surgery depending on how bad your symptoms are.

I had ACDF surgery on my C5-C6 in January 2022 and all of my symptoms improved except for some residual arm/hand weakness due to permanent damage to my spinal cord. If you haven’t already seen a good orthopedic spine specialist to review the MRI and all of your symptoms during an office exam, I recommend you do so ASAP. I found my surgeon by researching online for patient reviews. My surgeon was highly rated plus the hospital he does surgery at. He has anazing bedside manner for a surgeon where he is respectful, makes eye contact, is a good communicator, and takes the time to answer your questions. He just did my lumbar spine decompression and fusion (L3-L5) on 8/2/2024 because I trusted him with my ACDF surgery. FYI…the lumbar surgery was more painful than the cervical spine surgery.

Good luck getting answers and treatment much sooner than I did. It shouldn’t have taken my doctors to properly diagnose me 5 years. I am so glad I had some divine intervention nudging me not to give up and go to a new orthopedic doctor about my symptoms. I was getting the runaround and I was so tired of wasting time and money getting nowhere. My 3rd doctor/surgeon finally listened to my symptoms and looked at my images and put the puzzle pieces together when no one else did. Don’t give up!

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@dlydailyhope

@pinktummy
I am a 55 year old female who has congenital cervical/neck and lumbar/low back spinal stenosis. I also have degenerative disc disease and osteoarthritis in my spine.

Like you, I had spinal cord flattening but at C5-C6. My symptoms were constant neck/shoulder pain, daily headaches, weak arms/hands that caused me to drop things and made my handwriting terrible. My bladder control was significantly affected where I of a sudden had daily wet underwear where this never happened before (as a female, they will first blame age, having a baby or peri/menopause and prescribe oxybutinin as a bandaid), and difficulty walking (felt like I had cement boots on).

What I didn’t know then but I know now is flattening means spinal cord compression injury. This can permanently damage your spinal cord but also affect blood supply up and down. This is an urgent need to consider surgery depending on how bad your symptoms are.

I had ACDF surgery on my C5-C6 in January 2022 and all of my symptoms improved except for some residual arm/hand weakness due to permanent damage to my spinal cord. If you haven’t already seen a good orthopedic spine specialist to review the MRI and all of your symptoms during an office exam, I recommend you do so ASAP. I found my surgeon by researching online for patient reviews. My surgeon was highly rated plus the hospital he does surgery at. He has anazing bedside manner for a surgeon where he is respectful, makes eye contact, is a good communicator, and takes the time to answer your questions. He just did my lumbar spine decompression and fusion (L3-L5) on 8/2/2024 because I trusted him with my ACDF surgery. FYI…the lumbar surgery was more painful than the cervical spine surgery.

Good luck getting answers and treatment much sooner than I did. It shouldn’t have taken my doctors to properly diagnose me 5 years. I am so glad I had some divine intervention nudging me not to give up and go to a new orthopedic doctor about my symptoms. I was getting the runaround and I was so tired of wasting time and money getting nowhere. My 3rd doctor/surgeon finally listened to my symptoms and looked at my images and put the puzzle pieces together when no one else did. Don’t give up!

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Thank You !! That is what I needed to know, finally someone gives me a straight answer !! My MRI was done on 08/22/24 & I am waiting on my neurologist to contact me about the results, but I am not waiting to start the ball rolling with the cord compression, I will be reaching out to my doc's this week !! Thank You ! Thank You ! Thank You !

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