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Myelomalacia: Let's connect

Spine Health | Last Active: 2 days ago | Replies (81)

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@dorob

Is Mayo Clinic doing stem cell therapy for myelomalacia? I am 72. Have had two cervical neck surgeries in 2008 and 2018. In 2021 had grade 4 concussion. Then had knee replacement in which quad tendon or ligament ‘popped’ immediately after surgery. As a result have struggled with numerous falls becuz quad does not engage. I had myelomalacia diagnosed at first surgery, seen again at second at Mayo and mris, ctscans after numerous falls shows ‘progression’ at C6-7. I’m having symptoms - numbness, burning both arms, 4th and 5th digits, lateral sides of feet. Not sure my age can handle another cervical surgery tho I am otherwise healthy and active. Will stem cell to the degeneration in C6-7 slow the progression of the myelomalacia?

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Replies to "Is Mayo Clinic doing stem cell therapy for myelomalacia? I am 72. Have had two cervical..."

@dorob Welcome to Connect. I'm glad you have been seen at Mayo. Are you currently a patient there? It may be best to ask your questions of your specialists. I understand why you would ask. Have you tried physical therapy?

My physical therapist also does Myofascial Release which helps release tight tissue and scar tissue. It can also release surgical scar tissue that gets tight. My understanding of myelomalacia is that it represents a loss of the nerve cells and is permanent. There is stem cell research for spinal cord trauma going on at Mayo in a Regenerative medicine department with Dr. Bydon. I believe this is research for recent trauma. Myelopathy is spinal cord dysfunction that may be able to recover if a decompression surgery removes the compression.

Numbness in the 4th and 5th digits may also be a symptom of thoracic outlet syndrome, which I have. That causes overlapping symptoms with spine generated symptoms, and it may be more common in spine patients when there was an injury like a whiplash or a repetitive stress injury.

Neuropathy - "Myofascial Release Therapy (MFR) for treating compression and pain"
https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/myofascial-release-therapy-mfr-for-treating-compression-and-pain/
There is a provider search at https://mfrtherapists.com/