Cervical myelopathy caused by herniated disc at C4-6 level
Has anyone with tingling/burning sensations in their legs have had improvements after ACDF surgery? If not immediately after surgery has it improved over time? I have really no other issues other than this and a little stiffness in my neck. Is paralysis the highest risk if involved in an accident such as a fall, car accident, etc....if no surgery? Does surgery eliminate this risk? What is the % of non-fusion or adjacent segment disease? And what is the % of revision surgery?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Spine Health Support Group.
Thank you for clarity regarding your issue and your kind words for healing. I hope and pray that someday for all of us who share the pain of neuropathy we will be healed.
I am a retired PT. Boy am I confused. All this talk and no specifics. You had involvement at C 4-6. Now let use look at that. You had involvement at C4-5 C5-6.
You are sayng you had an anterior fusion of two levels of intervertebral disc. Normally you would have symptoms at both levels. Function over laps, so more than one level innervates motor and sensory function. .Sensory C4-5 is more around the neck and upper Shoulder. C5-6 can go down the front of the am and into the thumb.with sensory function. The motor nerve C4-5 generally contributes to the scapula. C-5-6 is big time to the thumb as part of he median nerve( radial and ulnar are the other arm branches. IF A HERNIATED DISC MOVES MORE FOREWARD, it will impinge on the spinal cord. ^Thumb, The question becomes, do you want to live very safely and not fall and become a quadriplegia, or do you have a preventive surgery. I had a C3-4 fusion anteriorly.l I have a C6-7 not fusioned. If the hernia is large enough , you can lose lose feeling and movement below that level ;if you fall and cut through. I* regained movement, but I m dealing with a lot of arm and neck numbness that is turning more to pain. I was on drugs once for the back. I m not using anything. I see my nerurosugeon next week. Short of surgery, ablation and injections have helped some. Keep on tyelnol and aspirin until you work out a plan with your Neurourgron.
Thanx for a great explanation of things. I will be having ACDF on c5-6, c6-7 on March 13 here in NJ. My pain has been left shoulder, arm and neck pain , and got some relief from a shot. Presently not too bad, as a muscle relaxant helps a lot. I also read with interest your bit about leg pain, which I have too, and thought it was part of my spinal stenosis. Hopefully, everything will work out, and being positive too.
Thank you. Your C-6-7 will involve the index as well as the thumb and musclecutaneous sensory nerve to the forearm on the thumb side.. Good luck to you. The anterior fusion was like a vacation to me. Advice---Make special arrangements with TH# SURGEON for any necessary drugs afterward. You will get medication ONLY when the drug cart is scheduled. I needed some sooner and turned into a risk patient. Oherwise, i have no scares or adverse effects from the procedure at C3-4. Again good luck.
That’s a great thing your doctors do - I currently am waiting for my appt at Mayo and I hope the experience is different then the one I’m having here at home . I feel very unheard and basically like no one cares about my serious issues with my neck and myelopathy .
Hi Mary. I had cervical spine surgery at Mayo for spinal cord compression.
I can tell you from my experience there, that they are very thorough. The surgeon who took my case sent me first for a neurology exam on day 1, and the neurologist scheduled testing and appointments based on his exam. He scheduled testing for thoracic outlet syndrome to confirm that I had it, blood work, and a consult with a thoracic surgeon about that on day number 2. It was an hour later on day 2 when I was meeting the neurosurgeon and the thoracic surgeon called him with his results during my appointment. The neuro spine surgeon explained my MRI imaging to me that I had previously sent to him and offered surgery right away. Everyone at Mayo listened to my concerns and I was very impressed. The neurosurgeon was kind and so was his nurse who helped me with my questions in the weeks before my surgery. She was also there in the operating room to hold my hand while they were getting me ready.
I didn't know that health care cold be like this because in the 5 non-Mayo surgeons who examined me, none had treated me this well or believed what I said. I had some unusual symptoms because I had pain all over my body and trouble walking from cervical cord compression. The other surgeons missed that those symptoms were caused by my cord compression and refused to help me over a 2 year period. So for 2 years, I just got worse until I came to Mayo.
I got my life back. My spine surgery was 5 years ago. Last year, I contacted my neurosurgeon at Mayo because I needed to find a good surgeon for a bad ankle fracture, and he contacted me right away with a referral at Mayo.
I think you will love Mayo. I did. I was so impressed with the spine surgery that gave me back the coordination of my arms, that I gave my surgeon a gift to express my gratitude. Here is my story.
https://sharing.mayoclinic.org/2019/01/09/using-the-art-of-medicine-to-overcome-fear-of-surgery/
While you are there, make sure to enjoy the art and sculpture and the people playing pianos in the atrium of the Gonda building. When will you be seen at Mayo? Do you need travel information or recommendations?
Today , I am feeling concerned at how fatigued I am and yet seems like walking the little that I do is weird and I feel like I am 90 yrs old . I feel like I have so many issues from different parts of my spine / I’m not sure what is causing eggs and my experience up until now is that no one wants to listen more then a minute and my problems are far too complex for that . It seems my medical care as far as this area goes has just been up to me ,begging and pleading for someone to help me . I am a NP and I think I am a good , informed patient and I fight hard to get help here. But it’s just not happening and maybe that is a blessing bc it has forced me to look elsewhere . And I decided it I was going elsewhere, I would go for the best. I lost my surgeon here about 6 months after my ACDF and PCDF - he had a rare medical program and had to retire . I was so sick when I had my surgeries , I feel I am a little unsure of what I had done . I had a rare infection previous to surgery and I could not focus enough to listen to details. My surgery was pushed back another year which just caused more time with my spinal cord being compressed .
I also though I had thoracic outlet syndrome , but that was ingnored previously by another surgeon .
So now I am very concerned about being able to have some quality of life and not living as I am now. My biggest fear is getting there and being told it’s just too far gone to do anything about it . I definitely need Drs who have the time to study me and my situation and look at my entire spine - I have problems all over !
@marycdickens01 Hi Mary. I understand your fears. I felt the same way because I was turned down by 5 local surgeons before I came to Mayo. Mayo offers appointments when they feel they can help, and they want to help you. I hope that can ease your mind a bit. I was pleading for help too before I came to Mayo, and maybe that helped me be accepted because I had already tried for 2 years to get help. You made the right decision.
With your prior cervical surgeries, you do need some experts to evaluate that and look for any new developments. You will be in good hands at Mayo. If you tell the neurologist that you are concerned about thoracic outlet syndrome, they will likely test you for it. They can listen to the pulse in your neck and have you turn your head. If that pulse is diminished by position of neck or arms, it could be TOS, and they would likely test you in the vascular lab. For me, they put tiny blood pressure cuffs on each of my fingers and manipulated my arm into different positions, and they measured the drop in blood pressure. It is hard to find a place that understands TOS and they do at Mayo which is one of my reasons for seeking care there.
I'm glad my Mayo spine surgeon is a lot younger than I am and he will be there if I need him again and he is a super nice guy and very down to earth. When I was trying to get local help unsuccessfully, I was also seeing a physical therapist who would realign my cervical spine and she used a Dolphin Neurostimulator to suppress pain signals with an electric current. That helped buy me some time when I was feeling hopeless. I also used a heated neck wrap and would lay down with that to try to relax the muscle spasms.
Walking ability can be affected by cervical spinal cord compression and I walked with a limp because of it, and then when my therapist realigned my neck better, I walked normally again. Muscle spasms were independently twisting my vertebrae or tilting them, and I had 2mm of backward slipping of C5 over C6. If you can work with a physical therapist now, it may help you function a little better while you wait for your consult.
I wish I could just hold you hand and help you through all of this. Do you have your hotel reservations yet? Mayo has many excellent surgeons. When I broke my ankle in 2020, I contacted my Mayo neurosurgeon and he gave me a referral to an orthopedic trauma surgeon and I returned to Mayo for those surgeries. That says a lot when a spine surgeon responds right away to help me with my ankle injury. They will listen to you. Everyone I saw at Mayo had the same approach of compassionate care. I had never had that before, and was impressed. Can you share the name of the neurosurgeon you will be seeing?
8 months ago I did a 3 level cervical fusion. Prior to surgery I had strong tingling in shoulder, neck. After surgery I developed strong tingling all the way down arm and into hand. During night it can feel like the nerves are having a seizure. When I get up they calm down... Basically, any pressure on back, neck, or shoulders will set nerves off... I have been doing physical therapy which seems to make it worse. I have already went through 2 different physical therapist. I have tried the seizure medications which did not work for me. The surgeon involved is basically blowing me off and says the one in office X-ray showed nothing and therefore it just may be my nerves need more time to heal. My concern is I didn't have these problems down the arm prior. I'm pushing for an EMG but we have a shortage of neurologists here and I can't get in until March next year just for a consult. In the meantime I have constant tingling down my leg Which is 24 hours A-day. I have degenerative disease there as well but have been told I do not qualify for surgery and the narrowing is minor. However it has gone on 24 hours A-day for over a year with no improvement with chiropractor care and physical therapy and again I'm concerned about permanent damage. Any advice is welcome.
Thank you Jennifer for sharing your story. My son is looking for a second opinion for cervical fusion surgery and it sounds like you have a great surgeon. A trip to Mayo may be in our future!
I see that you're a painter. Before surgery, did you have muscle atrophy, weakness or fatigue in your arms?
My son has craniocervical instability, and bulging discs at C4-5-6. He also has retroflexed odontoid with pannus. He is a professional guitarist, and he finds it more and more challenging to play, even simple things. He teaches guitar full time and is concerned/alarmed that someday he may not be able to play or teach at all. Anxiety is high!
One of his options is spinal fusion and he is seeing a neurosurgeon close to us. In the meantime he's doing stem cell treatments in his neck at the Centeno-Schultz Clinic in Colorado, trying to avoid surgery.
I'm wondering how your arm function was affected before surgery.
Thank you!