Cervical stenosis: Leg weakness

Posted by candrgonzalez @candrgonzalez, Aug 25, 2019

Hi. I'm 59 years old female with chronic neck pain. I have been diagnosed with cervical stenosis and a bulging disc. I am very concerned because I get leg weakness and loose my balance. Has anyone have this leg problem? I just started seeing a pain management Doctor and he said he is going to treat me with some neck injections.

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I am going to have Medial Branch injections in C5-6-7 in two weeks to see if I get relief for my pain. If it reduces my pain by eighty percent I will get injections that will hopefully last several months.Here’s to hopeing. It is worth the try I am in excruciating pain.

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Me too but I am seventy two.

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@daliea

I am going to have Medial Branch injections in C5-6-7 in two weeks to see if I get relief for my pain. If it reduces my pain by eighty percent I will get injections that will hopefully last several months.Here’s to hopeing. It is worth the try I am in excruciating pain.

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All the best. I hope your pain is reduced.
I'm waiting for injections in my lower back.

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@lebanon100

All the best. I hope your pain is reduced.
I'm waiting for injections in my lower back.

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Thank you lebanon100,
It is a journey for all of us and not one anyone would choose. If this works next will be my lumbar spine,my doctor explained that last year the insurance companies will not pay for injection in the thoracic if you have cervical or lumbar injections so the doctors figured out a way of getting enough medication in the cervical and lumbar to aide in the pain in the thoracic areas as well (maybe). I had to make a choice.

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I have almost the same problem as you. I was diagnosed with cervical stenosis several years ago. PT cleared it up about 6 years ago. I occasionally get what is called a cervogenic headache on the left side of my head. I did get an injection on the left side of my neck about a year ago. The injection wasn''t as painful as I thought it would be. I still get the headache but only occasionally. It did help for awhile.

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@jenniferhunter

@candrgonzalez I have been where you are now with leg weakness caused by cervical stenosis. I had a ruptured disc and bone spurs compressing my spinal cord at C5C6 and as that got worse, the leg problems increased as well as pain all over my body. I also had muscle spasms that pulled my cervical vertebrae out of the correct lordotic curve, and that increased my leg symptoms and I walked with an uneven gait, like walking with a limp and you can't walk normally if you try. This was something that was missed by every spine surgeon who saw me before I came to Mayo, and none of them thought it was related, but they misunderstand my case and these symptoms. When my physical therapist would realign my spine, I could walk normally again, until the spasms returned which essentially squeezed the spinal cord into a smaller space by shifting the bones. I was also loosing muscle in my arms and shoulders and a lot in back that I didn't notice until I looked in a mirror after my therapist pointed it out. Since my surgery, I got some of that muscle back, but there is still a deficit from what used to be there.

I would caution you about epidural injections in your neck. Doctors like to do that to put off surgery, and the effects are temporary. There are some serious risks too if they inject the wrong place. I had an adverse reaction to an epidural that caused a new paraestheisa pain that sent stabbing electric shocks into my hand and fingers, and if I moved at all, the pain increased. All I could do was get in bed, prop my arm on a pillow and try not to move. It didn't start to improve until about 5 days later, and then I still got stabbing pains, just not as frequently and it took about 6 weeks to stop happening. I had cold sensitivity in that hand for a year and a half. You don't have to do them. I refused to do any more. The injection won't fix anything. You can decide if that is something you want to try or not. The only real fix for cervical stenosis is surgery. If this is affecting your balance, my advice would be to start getting opinions on surgery and get several. Evaluate the doctors as best you can by looking at their training, area of interest, and read their research papers and look at how others in the field regard them. Are they a leader who is teaching at a medical school or teaching lab courses for surgeons who are in practice? There are independent ratings and lists like Becker's Spine where they list 100 spine surgeons to know and that gets updated fairly often. You can find out about current research and studies and who is doing what and where. That isn't foolproof; some of the surgeons who saw me were on that list, but didn't get it right. Learn all you can about this so you will ask good questions when you are at an evaluation. You want to be in a position to make an informed decision when the time is right. It took me 2 years to find a surgeon willing to help me because none wanted to risk their reputation and statistics of their surgical success on me. It was suggested that I could have another problem like MS which wasn't true. I never expected to be dismissed over and over for an obvious problem.

Balance problems also come from misalignment of C1 & C2 and that happened to me. It caused vertigo and I fell over. That is probably what scared Surgeon #5 out of helping me, but it is a real symptom that goes with a cervical spine problem. Skull /spine misalignment can be serious if there is also some instability or slipping of one vertebrae over another. I had 2 mm of movement of this slipping at C5/C6, and maybe some at other levels. If there is instabililty between C1, the "atlas" and the skull, that needs an expert evaluation before anyone tries to treat it. I also have thoracic outlet syndrome that causes tight muscles in my neck and chest, and it starts twisting my vertebrae just a little bit, but that is enough to cause bad headaches and nausea or dizziness.

Track your symptoms on a body diagram, and draw where you have pain or other symptoms, what you were doing at the time (because it can be different when your spine changes position) and date. You will know how fast your symptoms are changing. I wish I had come to Mayo first because that is where I found the true expertise in a surgeon who understood my symptoms and was willing to help. I found medical literature about cases like mine, and contacted a surgeon at Mayo with that and described how my symptoms were similar. One of the predictors was the epidural shot I had that had taken all the pre-existing pain away temporarily and that was common with the patients in the literature. By the time I had surgery, I could bend my neck and send an electric shock down my body because of spinal cord compression.

I was lucky when I contacted Mayo. I got an appointment a month later due to a cancellation, but I had been told it might be a 3 month wait. I'd seen enough surgeons and knew enough by that time, so I knew that I was getting good answers to my questions, and I had very successful surgery at Mayo and I've had a great recovery. All of this can cause permanent damage to the spinal cord, and that happens to patients who wait too long. That being said, I understand the fear that goes with this, and you will need to trust the surgeon you choose with your life, so choose wisely. I think I'm lucky that none of the previous surgeons would help, because I had the best of the best at Mayo, and I had excellent results. I wasted a lot of time waiting weeks for appointments, then weeks to discuss with a doctor, then weeks for something else, and on it went for 6 months while I just got worse and after all that a denial for help. At Mayo they efficiently refer you to other specialists as a team approach and they get this testing done in a few days. I had an offer of surgical help at my first appointment with the Mayo surgeon as opposed to no answers after over 2 years somewhere else. I was able to get scheduled for surgery within a couple weeks of my evaluation at Mayo and I'm doing great.

Here are some links, the medical literature I spoke about and my patient story. Let me know if you have any questions. I would be happy to answer.

https://sharing.mayoclinic.org/2019/01/09/using-the-art-of-medicine-to-overcome-fear-of-surgery/

Excerpts from "Cervical cord compression presenting with sciatica-like leg pain" from the European Spine Journal
http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3111492/reload=0

"Funicular leg pain is a rare presentation of cervical cord compression."

"Leg pain or sciatica is a rare ‘false localizing’ presentation of cervical cord compression and there has been only a few cases described in literature [1–5]. The term sciatica has often been associated with disorders of the lumbar spine and pelvis, and we often tend to overlook other parts of the spine in the search for its cause. We report two cases of cervical cord compression, which presented with sciatica-like leg pain. Each case is unique and different from one another in their presentation and concurrent spinal lesions. We hope that the discussion of these cases and the accompanying literature review will make us more aware of this uncommon presentation of leg pain in cervical cord compression."

Jump to this post

Hello- I read your story and it's like reading my life. Same age and same problems. I have numbness from my right knee down the outside of my calf into my foot and toes. I also have burning from my left shoulder down to my elbow. The pain is indescribable. I am currently looking for another surgeon as there is no sense of urgency there. I spoke with his nurse yesterday to let them know the numbness had spread. I was told there is nothing they can do until I see him on the 18th. My appointment was cancelled due to an emergency surgery. Now I have to wait another 3 weeks for an appointment. I'm at the end of my patience. Thank you for all of the information you provided. I'm glad that you are doing well!

REPLY
@jenniferhunter

@candrgonzalez I have been where you are now with leg weakness caused by cervical stenosis. I had a ruptured disc and bone spurs compressing my spinal cord at C5C6 and as that got worse, the leg problems increased as well as pain all over my body. I also had muscle spasms that pulled my cervical vertebrae out of the correct lordotic curve, and that increased my leg symptoms and I walked with an uneven gait, like walking with a limp and you can't walk normally if you try. This was something that was missed by every spine surgeon who saw me before I came to Mayo, and none of them thought it was related, but they misunderstand my case and these symptoms. When my physical therapist would realign my spine, I could walk normally again, until the spasms returned which essentially squeezed the spinal cord into a smaller space by shifting the bones. I was also loosing muscle in my arms and shoulders and a lot in back that I didn't notice until I looked in a mirror after my therapist pointed it out. Since my surgery, I got some of that muscle back, but there is still a deficit from what used to be there.

I would caution you about epidural injections in your neck. Doctors like to do that to put off surgery, and the effects are temporary. There are some serious risks too if they inject the wrong place. I had an adverse reaction to an epidural that caused a new paraestheisa pain that sent stabbing electric shocks into my hand and fingers, and if I moved at all, the pain increased. All I could do was get in bed, prop my arm on a pillow and try not to move. It didn't start to improve until about 5 days later, and then I still got stabbing pains, just not as frequently and it took about 6 weeks to stop happening. I had cold sensitivity in that hand for a year and a half. You don't have to do them. I refused to do any more. The injection won't fix anything. You can decide if that is something you want to try or not. The only real fix for cervical stenosis is surgery. If this is affecting your balance, my advice would be to start getting opinions on surgery and get several. Evaluate the doctors as best you can by looking at their training, area of interest, and read their research papers and look at how others in the field regard them. Are they a leader who is teaching at a medical school or teaching lab courses for surgeons who are in practice? There are independent ratings and lists like Becker's Spine where they list 100 spine surgeons to know and that gets updated fairly often. You can find out about current research and studies and who is doing what and where. That isn't foolproof; some of the surgeons who saw me were on that list, but didn't get it right. Learn all you can about this so you will ask good questions when you are at an evaluation. You want to be in a position to make an informed decision when the time is right. It took me 2 years to find a surgeon willing to help me because none wanted to risk their reputation and statistics of their surgical success on me. It was suggested that I could have another problem like MS which wasn't true. I never expected to be dismissed over and over for an obvious problem.

Balance problems also come from misalignment of C1 & C2 and that happened to me. It caused vertigo and I fell over. That is probably what scared Surgeon #5 out of helping me, but it is a real symptom that goes with a cervical spine problem. Skull /spine misalignment can be serious if there is also some instability or slipping of one vertebrae over another. I had 2 mm of movement of this slipping at C5/C6, and maybe some at other levels. If there is instabililty between C1, the "atlas" and the skull, that needs an expert evaluation before anyone tries to treat it. I also have thoracic outlet syndrome that causes tight muscles in my neck and chest, and it starts twisting my vertebrae just a little bit, but that is enough to cause bad headaches and nausea or dizziness.

Track your symptoms on a body diagram, and draw where you have pain or other symptoms, what you were doing at the time (because it can be different when your spine changes position) and date. You will know how fast your symptoms are changing. I wish I had come to Mayo first because that is where I found the true expertise in a surgeon who understood my symptoms and was willing to help. I found medical literature about cases like mine, and contacted a surgeon at Mayo with that and described how my symptoms were similar. One of the predictors was the epidural shot I had that had taken all the pre-existing pain away temporarily and that was common with the patients in the literature. By the time I had surgery, I could bend my neck and send an electric shock down my body because of spinal cord compression.

I was lucky when I contacted Mayo. I got an appointment a month later due to a cancellation, but I had been told it might be a 3 month wait. I'd seen enough surgeons and knew enough by that time, so I knew that I was getting good answers to my questions, and I had very successful surgery at Mayo and I've had a great recovery. All of this can cause permanent damage to the spinal cord, and that happens to patients who wait too long. That being said, I understand the fear that goes with this, and you will need to trust the surgeon you choose with your life, so choose wisely. I think I'm lucky that none of the previous surgeons would help, because I had the best of the best at Mayo, and I had excellent results. I wasted a lot of time waiting weeks for appointments, then weeks to discuss with a doctor, then weeks for something else, and on it went for 6 months while I just got worse and after all that a denial for help. At Mayo they efficiently refer you to other specialists as a team approach and they get this testing done in a few days. I had an offer of surgical help at my first appointment with the Mayo surgeon as opposed to no answers after over 2 years somewhere else. I was able to get scheduled for surgery within a couple weeks of my evaluation at Mayo and I'm doing great.

Here are some links, the medical literature I spoke about and my patient story. Let me know if you have any questions. I would be happy to answer.

https://sharing.mayoclinic.org/2019/01/09/using-the-art-of-medicine-to-overcome-fear-of-surgery/

Excerpts from "Cervical cord compression presenting with sciatica-like leg pain" from the European Spine Journal
http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3111492/reload=0

"Funicular leg pain is a rare presentation of cervical cord compression."

"Leg pain or sciatica is a rare ‘false localizing’ presentation of cervical cord compression and there has been only a few cases described in literature [1–5]. The term sciatica has often been associated with disorders of the lumbar spine and pelvis, and we often tend to overlook other parts of the spine in the search for its cause. We report two cases of cervical cord compression, which presented with sciatica-like leg pain. Each case is unique and different from one another in their presentation and concurrent spinal lesions. We hope that the discussion of these cases and the accompanying literature review will make us more aware of this uncommon presentation of leg pain in cervical cord compression."

Jump to this post

Hello- I read your story and it's like reading my life. Same age and same problems. I have numbness from my right knee down the outside of my calf into my foot and toes. I also have burning from my left shoulder down to my elbow. The pain is indescribable. I am currently looking for another surgeon as there is no sense of urgency there. I spoke with his nurse yesterday to let them know the numbness had spread. I was told there is nothing they can do until I see him on the 18th. In the meantime im just supposed to deal with it I guess. My appointment was cancelled due to an emergency surgery. Now I have to wait another 3 weeks for an appointment. I'm at the end of my patience. Thank you for all of the information you provided. I'm glad that you are doing well!

REPLY

I have recently been diagnosed with DISH much to my disappointment. Having had two back laminectomies with fusion in the last five years, with the last one in 20/19. The first one was done by an Orthopedic surgeon and the second one was done by Nero-surgeon. Neither one mentioned the term DISH nor the negative consequences I was about to experience, ie, loss of strength, loss of flexibility in my back, loss of balance, just to mention the more serious ones. I had a neurologist try for a year to figure out what my problem was and he even sent me to U of M for a "second opinion" with no solution. In the meantime, my conditions kept getting worse. The last word I got, from the doctor who informed me that I had this condition called DISH for which there was nothing that could be done for it and that I will keep getting worse with the strong possibility that paralysis will eventually take over. Has anyone else had this prognosis given to them? I am 83 years old and was told that surgery was not an option because, at my age, it would be to dangerous due to the length of time I would have to be under anesthesia. As a side note, I have been told that my heart is in very good condition as well as my lungs are and I am on no prescription drugs at all.

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I’m an 81 year old woman and my main illness is Panhypopituitarism which I was diagnosed with in January 2000. One of the results of that illness is osteoporosis which causes a lot of severe pain in my back and hips due to resulting stenosis. I had surgery on my back several years ago but the surgeon made an error during the surgery which radically intensified the pain. I’ve been seeing a pain management doctor for several years and he has prescribed two pain medications which helped quite a lot at first but I am getting a lot less pain relief now and as the relief lessens my legs become more and more weak. The weakness makes it very difficult to take the walks that I used to take and to do other exercises that I once did. So I really empathize with you. I just don’t know what to do from here.

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@daliea

I am going to have Medial Branch injections in C5-6-7 in two weeks to see if I get relief for my pain. If it reduces my pain by eighty percent I will get injections that will hopefully last several months.Here’s to hopeing. It is worth the try I am in excruciating pain.

Jump to this post

I was hoping the lumbar injections would help like you. My experience they were no help , my pain and incontinence worsened. For 6 weeks after injection I was a mess, weak, shaky, crying over nothing, lost appetite, could not sleep, was confused and had terrible hot flashes and sweating. Endocrinologist said I had WAY too much steroid in my body causing it all. Things are now somewhat less horrible. Just beware those shots don’t always help. I am seeing a surgeon in a couple of days. I do hope the shots help you.

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