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Vertigo

Autoimmune Diseases | Last Active: Aug 10 3:40pm | Replies (55)

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@gldnrtrvrlvr

@jenniferhunter I just read through several of your responses to others regarding cervical vertebrae/spinal stenosis/vertigo/muscle spasms/surgery etc. and it sounded like what I'm living with! My surgeon says my moderate to severe stenosis isn't at surgery level STILL. In the past several months, I've lost my balance multiple times and sometimes it doesn't come back. One night I just went to bed because it was that bad. I've told several doctors. (I'm new and haven't created my profile yet.) None of my doctors have been phased by my vertigo report. Getting doctors to react and act in this area is an issue. My doctors are to do what's going to be healthy to keep me moving so I can resume a very physically active life. Recently, I started taking supplements that brought energy back so that I am not sleeping my days away, Fibro. After two years of no energy, this is thrilling. Two are Young Living supplements and the third is a Methylfolate supplement (I have a genetic mutation where I don't retain B-12 and Folic Acid). I'd tried so many products that people thought would work. I'd already been told that I need to take the one due to B-12/Folic Acid issue; the two descriptions of other 2 hit me as what I needed, tried, and wow!
Reading your post was very informative! There giving me things to think on, possibly act on, such as other surgeon opinions!
Me: have multiple auto-immune, chronic pain from L4-L5 Lumbar replacement w/pins and rods in place, Osteoporosis, osteo-arthritis, Migraines, TMJ and an allergy to mouth guards, bone spurs, tendonitis, muscle spasms, allergies including many food, and more. 😉

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Replies to "@jenniferhunter I just read through several of your responses to others regarding cervical vertebrae/spinal stenosis/vertigo/muscle spasms/surgery..."

@gldnrtrvrlvr Thank you for your comments. I would encourage you to get another surgical opinion if you have severe stenosis. They might be looking for spinal cord damage that happens when the blood supply to the spinal cord is cut off by pressure, and tissue starts to die to show a white area on the spinal cord imaging. That becomes permanent damage. I didn't have any myelopathy visible on my MRIs, but my Mayo surgeon said it doesn't always show on the MRI. It was when I told surgeon #5 about the vertigo, that he dismissed me. I think that opens up a can of worms that could be more serious issues. I've read my Mayo surgeon's papers where he talks about vertigo with cervical spine issues, but I was really afraid to talk too much about it, so I focused more on the muscle spasms. If no one has talked to you about addressing the stenosis, you might want to consider Mayo Clinic. It's a different world there where every doctor there is focused around solving your issues as best they can and you'll be referred to other departments. I don't think most doctors like to hear about fibro either because they want good surgical outcomes, and if a patient has fibro, they may continue to have pain after spine surgery and blame the surgeon. Fibro becomes a catch all diagnosis when they can't identify the source of pain. I was told that long ago, but after I resolved my food allergies, I wasn't in pain anymore. Pain can also be from the fascia if it doesn't move properly, and myofascial release can help that which will also release the waste products that are stored there in the dehydrated tissues.

Your surgeon might be more focused on lumbar issues. My Mayo neurosurgeon is a spinal deformity expert, and teaches cervical surgeries, also has a spine orthopedic fellowship, and does both fusion and disc replacement. I'll be happy to share his information with you if you wish. I'm an artist who was loosing the ability to do my artwork, and my surgeon gave that back to me. In gratitude, I painted his portrait as a gift to him when I was recovered enough to do it. If I ever need spine surgery again, I'm coming back to him at Mayo. I think highly of him as a kind person outside of his profession.

I would recommend optimizing your vitamin D to help the osteoporosis. I take Vitamin K2 D3 from Orthomolecular on the advice of my functional medicine doctor. I think Mayo would be a good place to go regarding your vitamin B genetic issues in case they have something that could help. Migraines and TMJ can also be caused (or made worse) my muscle spasms from a cervical spine problem. Working with a physical therapist helped me a lot during the years when no surgeon would help me, and she would realign my spine the best she could and block pain with some neurostimulation ( Dolphin Neurostimulators).

You do have to advocate for yourself. Don't just wait because your surgeon thinks you're not bad enough for surgery if you don't agree. I think loosing your balance is a problem. I actually fell over like a tree and could not stop myself even though I had my hand on my porch railing. I called my physical therapist a few times and she had shown me things to do in the office. One one occasion, I had fixed about 90% of a vertigo problem myself before I got to my PT appointment. I've been in physical therapy about 4 years treating the thoracic outlet syndrome and I have learned a lot in doing so, and during that time, I developed stenosis after the disc ruptured and bone spurs grew. I had to push for MRIs when doctors kept wanting to wait a year between them, and I saw the bone spurs double in size in 9 months time. My biology background helps me to understand MRIs. Again, thanks for your comments. I'm glad I could help. Let me know if you have other questions.