Cervical Stenosis
I was recently diagnosed with cervical spinal stenosis.
I am going to have an operation in the coming weeks that involves , vertebrae fusion in my neck..Delicate long opération…..
I am interested to know anyone who had this operation and how managed after the surgery.
I will have my operation at the University Hospital in Sherbrooke Qc.
I live in Sherbrooke Quebec Canada
Thank you William
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Unlike you I had no specific diagnosis of CSS. I went in for the lumbar procedure, but pre-op the surgeon noticed something and decided I needed cervical attention first. So they woke me up and had me come back a week later to do the neck. No problems before during or after the procedure on C3-C5.
Make sure you dot your I's and cross your T's. Fusion made my life a lot more challenging. Not saying its not going to work but find a Dr who isn't just pumping out surgeries and cares somewhat about you and your recovery. I had ACDF C5-C6 and walked out of the hospital 3 hours after surgery with no brace no support no nothing and 4 yrs later its a mess. Wishing you the best and and fastest
recovery possible.
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2 Reactions@bajjerfan I have a Arch Hypertrophy Laminectomy scheduled for June on L-5, S-1. I also have severe C-4,5,6 CSS. As my days are counting Down., my lower spine is mainly on left, but after 3rd injection, 1wk 1/2 ago, now the pain has come back severely on both sides and left is still worse than right, left leg numb, pins, needles, burning, sleepy/ charly horse pain in calf, and upper thigh, and A Large Sword in lower back. As all this has became worse, now my cervical spine is flared up, causing my arms, fingers, neck to be numb, stabbing, severe headache and cant stay awake throughout the day, " think my body is saying sleep from the Pain", which does Not help. I pray Laminectomy helps, and I hope you have relief from all you're C-SPINE, and L-spine surgeries. I talked prior to Neurosurgeon setting up L-spine surgery, about the C-spine, thinking this would be addressed b4 l-spine and guess they felt L- spine was more serious. Who knows?
Good evening, do you mind sharing what your MRI looked like in axial so I may compare? I have congenital spinal stenosis along with multilevel spondylosis and degenerative disc disease at the ripe young age of 28, which massive neurological symptoms if you see my post.
Would love to see what doctors consider needing surgery vs me who’s considered functionally deficient.
I hope you’re doing well and if you’re religious, I’ll be praying for a speedy recovery
Hello @jaydeeem32,
It is important to keep the community guidelines in mind when asking other members to potentially share private medical information. It is also important to remember that Mayo Clinic Connect is a public space so we encourage our members to protect their private data and healthcare information as much as possible.
A direct comparison can sometimes be difficult because the same diagnosis for two people does not always mean the same symptoms or treatment options based on many circumstances and personal health situations.
@jaydeeem32, when you say you are functionally deficient, does this mean you do not qualify for needing surgery?
@JustinMcClanahan
Understood, I meant no harm obviously, but I’ll keep that in mind, thank you for telling me.
And by functionally deficient, I mean, everybody is telling me there is nothing to operate on, but I have a compression ratio of .4, and in some axial slices of my cervical, there’s no CSF around half the cord.
It’s terrifying because I’m losing motor control in my body and nobody can tell me why, no matter how many doctors I’ve seen, so now I can only rely on other people’s experiences because I’m now at a loss.