@pauldandurand Paul, thanks for reaching out. From your posts, it sounds like your Pedicle screws loosened and your spine didn’t fuse. I am not surprised that the surgeon who operated seems to be casting this aside. Surgeons don’t want to fail or deal with something adverse. I went through this too years ago with carpal tunnel surgery that didn’t completely correct nerve pain because the doctor missed the diagnosis of thoracic outlet syndrome that causes overlapping symptoms in the same nerves. I had to go in search of a doctor familiar with TOS and they are few.
I had spinal surgery at Mayo for a ruptured C5/C6 disc with Jeremy Fogelson at the Rochester campus 10 years ago. He is excellent and is a spine deformity expert and does some extensive surgery including scoliosis. He would be an excellent consultant if you can go to Mayo.
I have read a lot about spine surgery and pedicle screws can pull out if placed at the incorrect angle or if there is poor bone density to hold them. I have only had cervical surgery and Dr Fogelson’s advice to me to avoid future spine issues was to maintain good core strength. I do go to PT and I own a horse and riding just at a walk if very therapeutic building muscle strength. It helps me maintain good posture.
The other therapy that helps me is myofascial release and that is helpful for loosening surgical scar tissue that keeps getting tight. It may be worth seeing an MFR specialist and there is a provider search at mfrtherapists.com.
What sounds concerning is if there is instability developing in your spine and how much that affects you either now or in the future. If your fusion is not fused, the hardware must be holding the spine in place and that depends on good bone quality.
Do you plan to see another spine specialist for an evaluation ?
@jenniferhunter
Hi Jennifer,
Thanks for your nice reply and for sharing your story. I'm glad you able to rid and walk for enjoyment and muscle strengthening. Doing PT is what I need to do as well. Need to find the right one.
I have seen a dozen spine specialists, mostly in Europe, but also had an assessment done by the Cleveland Clinic. At this time, most feel going in surgically will only induce more fibrosis and risk making things worse. They say changing the disc with better material for fusion could work, but it may not likely lead to less back pain. My likely scenario is the fibrosis around the root nerve is causing severe nerve problems with my right foot. I go to the gym every day and every time I do the light weights and core exercises, the foot issues flairs up more. So it's a signal that activating the core is aggravating the spine hardware issues. However, it's a conundrum because I do need to keep the core muscles strengthened. I learned from my pre-surgery spine x-ray that my bone density is below average, but the surgeon wasn't concerned. The screws are in straight, but I assume my bone density is not sufficient for them.
I will research myofascial release. Thanks for suggesting it and thanks for providing the doctor's name.
[Update after research] I looked into with Claude AI research. My fibrosis is epidural, meaning it sits inside the spinal canal, encasing the L5 nerve root against the dural surface. The spine surgery literature says that epidural fibrosis is not reachable by external manual therapies. The documented treatment approaches are all interventional or surgical. Bummer. Regarding MFR, there are no published clinical studies that documents MFR having any effect, positive or negative, on epidural fibrosis specifically. Still, it was great to learn about MFR. Always looking for options and new ideas!