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DiscussionWhat are people's experiences with spinal fusion surgery?
Spine Health | Last Active: 5 hours ago | Replies (229)Comment receiving replies
@harvey2007 Oh my gosh did I get different responses from spine surgeons and 5 of them were wrong! One told me the spinal cord doesn't feel pain and I had pain all over my body. He just blew it off. I was in his office with all of my neck and back muscles with spasms that pulled my vertebrae out of alignment and he didn't even catch that because he never put his hands on me. I had to sit bolt upright or I had a lot of pain. That was fixed by my physical therapist, but I had spent 2 weeks in that condition which happened because I fell asleep sitting up and stressed my neck that had a spine injury. I got the MRI he ordered and never went back. I just found another surgeon.
Of course all of them could see the same thing I did on the MRI that my spinal cord was compressed. What they misunderstood was how that physical spinal cord compression from bone spurs was causing pain all over my body. I found medical literature with similar cases and I had to keep looking until I found a surgeon that understood "funicular pain" which was written up just a few years ago as a rare presentation of symptoms for spinal cord compression for which there is no test to confirm. The only test is that if the symptoms disappear after decompression surgery, then funicular pain is confirmed. A hint is also if an epidural spine injection temporarily relieves the all over body pain, it suggests funicular pain. I had that injection and that experience, and still, the surgeon didn't believe me and disregarded the results. He suggested an inflammatory problem like MS and refused surgical help to me stating that it would relieve very few of my symptoms and he didn't want to put me through it. This makes him sound like a compassionate guy, but in reality , he was looking out for his surgical success statistic ratings and he didn't want to risk his reputation with a poor outcome. He didn't understand the problem, so he regarded it as a big risk.
I knew all the surgeon's missed the diagnosis because I had tracked my symptoms on drawings that I dated and I knew the pattern of how pain developed, so I knew that initially, I could turn pain on and off by the position of my head. My very first symptom was if I turned my head, I got a sharp ankle pain, then if I straightened my neck, it went away. This was reproducible, but they didn't listen and the pain was caused by the bone spurs contacting the front of my spinal cord. That is confirmation that a problem with the position of my neck was causing pain with neurological consequences. The position of the spinal cord changes with body movement because it is supposed to float in the spinal fluid. When something tethers the spinal cord in place, it will cause symptoms in whatever is getting compressed, and symptoms in the body part that the nerves supply.
I also have a biology degree and understand medical literature. I watched a lot of online presentations by spine surgeons at conferences which I found because one of the former surgeons was a presenter, so I watched anything that was relevant and learned from surgeons discussing their cases. Then when I consulted with surgeon #6 at Mayo, he listened and gave me the right answers. He understood funicular pain, and he was the reason I found that literature about it in the first place because I found that term in one of his medical papers and looked it up. I had learned enough about spine surgery and research as well as current trends, that I knew I found a good surgeon. He was also at the top of his class in his education and had received awards and academic scholarships. Everything was positive and he loved his job. Burnout for surgeons is very real. It is a high stress job with serous consequences for mistakes, and a surgeon under excessive stress could be more likely to make a mistake. I found a surgeon who loved the challenge of the job because it was difficult, and who had a personal sense of satisfaction for improving the lives of his patients. Knowledge is everything and getting multiple opinions is very important when a significant life altering choice needs to be made. Surgeons are human, and mistakes can be made so easily. It is up to the patient to advocate for themselves or seek that help from someone else if things don't add up or the patient doesn't understand the choice they are making and possible consequences. Ask a lot of questions. A good surgeon is willing to answer them and explain what they see on imaging.
Replies to "@harvey2007 Oh my gosh did I get different responses from spine surgeons and 5 of them..."
Wow you have done a lot of research and good on you xx I have been struggling for years now with all over pain chronic fatigue, heavy legs and have seen numerous doctors some have said oh it’s your weight loose that and it will be all okay they didn’t listen to me at all very frustrating x I finally had a CT , MRI scan on my cervical area diagnosed with severe cord compression at 3 levels C 4 to C7 so I see one neurosurgeon and said why was I seeing him ? I can’t help you very depressing as my GP and PT were very concerned so when I seen my rheumatologist he was very angers in that doctors response and sent me off to see one of he’s colleges and he has offered me surgery up to me but I don’t fit the category of my arms and hands being effected? But my concern is better to get it now before it gets worse I am 58 atm as the nerves are compressed it’s a matter of time before they have had enough xx any thoughts would be helpful