Nerve Pain In Foot after Laminectomy

Posted by dakota24 @dakota24, Mar 18 1:41pm

I had L4/5 Laminectomy on 11/1/2024. Since the day after surgery I had terrible pain in my right foot. I did not have this pain prior to surgery. Every day I have a tingling/numbing feeling in my right foot, and at times burning sensations and also sharp nerve pains. This has prevented me from even putting on a regular shoe due to it hurting. I'm told nerves needed to find new pathways, this might get better. I cannot believe the only pathway here was to my right foot. I also still have bad lower back pain like I had before surgery. Anyone else have this? At what point will they consider injections or something other than gabapentin (which doesn't work) for this problem. It is ruining my life.

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@dlydailyhope

@smn1

Here is what my last lumbar MRI showed in 2024.

FINDINGS:
Vertebral body height, signal intensity and alignment:
* Type II Modic endplate changes around the degenerated L2/L3
intervertebral disc.
The conus has a normal configuration and terminates at level of L1
pedicles.
At the following level(s), SPONDYLOSIS, e.g., degenerative disk disease,
infolding of ligamenti flavi, uncovertebral hypertrophy, facet arthrosis
or some combination, causes:
L2/3: Mild central and mild bilateral foraminal stenosis
L3/4: Mild central, moderate RIGHT foraminal and mild LEFT foraminal
stenosis.
L4/5: Severe central and moderate bilateral foraminal stenosis.
L5/S1: Mild LEFT foraminal stenosis.
Paraspinal soft tissues and visualized bony pelvis: The visualized
structures are unremarkable.
IMPRESSION:
Multilevel lumbosacral spondylosis, as described in the body of this
report. In particular at the L4/L5 level there is severe central and
moderate bilateral foraminal stenosis, but that has not changed relative
to most recent comparator (see above).

At the time, I had pain/numbness/weakness in my lower back, hips, buttocks, legs and feet bilaterally. Most improved after surgery but I have some residual numbness in my right foot big toe. I do have some nerve pain in my hips/hip flexors at times but I also have bilateral gluteal tendinopathy and bilateral hamstring tears so not sure if that is contributing to my sensations (don’t believe it has fully healed yet).

My compression in my lumbar spine started in 2011 and I have a congenitally narrow spinal canal so long term compression and nerve injury will take a while to heal. I was also told that you don’t really have a clear picture of surgery outcome for a full year.

For my cervical spine surgery in 2022, my c5-c6 was decompressed and fused and it relieved my daily headaches, neck/shoulder/shoulder blade pain and knots, some arm/hand pain/weakness and pain/numbness, improved bladder control, walking didn’t feel like I was wearing heavy cement boots anymore, etc. I have a new herniated disc at c6-c7 and some symptoms have returned (mostly neck pain, arm pain/weakness/numbness, bladder control issues and balance issues.

For me, I really have no choice but to have surgery when there is compression because my narrow spinal canal I was born with causes many symptoms and issues with the slightest degenerative changes. Physical therapy and spinal injection will only help so much for a short period of time.

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Yea it's kind of a nightmare when it feels as though it's one thing after another. And as you say, you really don't have many options when things are at the point of driving you crazy. But to address them an obviously areas around fusions get beat up and degenerate. But it sounds as though you have a competent care team... Best wishes going forward.

REPLY
@linda6101

Had a Laminectomy too but only at L3. My surgeon was also going to do L4 which he did not. He also said he was going to do a disectomy which he didn't do either!!! After the surgery, I was able to stay in the hospital for one day. When I went to stand up, I wasn't able to walk. I told the nurse and she said I was already checked out. My son brought me home and practically carried me into the house. I stayed home one day and used a walker dragging myself around the bedroom. He came over the next day, called an ambulance who took me to a hospital for 5 days, never getting out of bed. They told him to find an inpatient rehab facility which he did close to his house so he could check on me. He is my godsend since I live alone. I was fine in two weeks and returned home. The pain never went away and three months later I developed neuropathy in my waist, both legs and feet. I went to see him last week and he said to do yoga and walk more. Since I have all these problems, I can't do either of them. He was a real jerk. I am currently on Norco, Gabapentin and Tizanidine for 5 years..If I didn't have this, I couldn't live alone. This comes from my Pain Specialist who told me not to have surgery. I am seeing him tomorrow to ask for help . I heard of a new medication called Jouravx which is for pain and is non opioid. Walgreens has it in. Maybe this will be the answer to all my problems.

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I take Journavx for chronic pain. It is not an answer but it is a tool. I think it is mainly an adjunct and may make your current meds work better. There may be an issue with taking it with Gabapentin..it's so new that there is much that is unknown.

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@kdks99

I take Journavx for chronic pain. It is not an answer but it is a tool. I think it is mainly an adjunct and may make your current meds work better. There may be an issue with taking it with Gabapentin..it's so new that there is much that is unknown.

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I asked my Pain Specialist about it and he said it was in the same family as Gabapentin which I take a high dose of. Also, my insurance doesn't cover it, as it is a new drug which they always screw you on. The price is $15 a pill. You must not live in Illinois, or have great health insurance. I take Norco for pain until he can come up with something else. He wants me to go to another neurosurgeon at University of Chicago. I'm surprised because he is from Rush Orthopedics which is known as a great hospital for orthopedics in Chicago. I'm going to wait until fall before going to visit this new guy and try to enjoy my summer.

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Try seeing a pain management doctor. This is where you’ll get some choices as to how to proceed. I’m assuming you don’t want another surgery.

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