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Please Help With Mri Results

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heather029

New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 19 Dec 2005
Posts: 27
Location: Mississippi
Please Help With Mri Results
Posted: 12-19-05 02:56am

Hi, i'm new here and very desperate for some real answers about my mri readings. No one will elaborate on any of it for me and I am in severe pain everyday of my life. I'm stuck at home most of the time now due to the wretched pain and I have a two year old little boy I would like to enjoy. If anyone is curious, i'm a 29 year old woman. "too young to have all these problems" is what I get from the "doctors" around here.


Mri lumbar spine

findings

the signal within the lumbar vertebrae themselves appear unremarkable. The last lumbar vertebra is assumed to be l5 for the purpose of this exam. There is disc dessication at the l4-5 and also at the l5-s1 level. A small focus of high signal involving the posterior aspect of the annulus fibroiss at the l4-5 level is suggested on sagittal images.
A slight impression upon the thecal sac at the l4-5 level is suggested as well. At the l4-5 level, there is a moderate facet hypertrophy demonstrated bilaterally. There is also ligamentum flavum hypertrophy suggested at this level as well. Mild encroachment upon the spinal canal is suggested at the l4-5 level secondary to this combination of findings. The l5-s1 level is unremarkable.

Impression: disc dessication and a focal annular tear involving the posterior aspect of the annulus fibrosis at the l4-5 level noted as described above. This is superimposed upon the facet and ligamentum flavum hypertrophy at the l4-5 level and associated with mild encroachment upon the spinal canal at this level.


I also had another mri on my cervical region and to keep it short, here's what it said;
there is a 7 mm focus of high signal identified involving the anterior aspect of c4. This demonstrates high signal on t1 and t2 weighted images. Signal within the vertebrae is unremarkable. There is loss of cervical lordosis suggested on sagittal images. No evidence of paravertebral mass is noted.
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disabledcoastie

Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 13 Dec 2005
Posts: 68
Location: West Virginia

Posted: 12-19-05 10:01am

Heather,

i would look up your findings at www.Spineuniverse.Com

i"m not an expert but your lower back is degenerating, I would find a good neurologist and have him/her go over the findings.

Good luck
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BigJoe

New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 23 Dec 2005
Posts: 7
Location: New England

Posted: 12-23-05 15:41pm

Heather,

i have problems with my l4-l5 and s1 also. For the life of me, I can't decipher what those findings mean, but then again, i'm no doctor. I had an epidural steroid injection a couple of weeks ago to reduce inflamation, and for various reasons i'm going to have another in the next week or so. If it gets suggested to you to have one, I can tell you that I did it under mild sedation and it was absolutely no big deal.

You must find a doctor who can explain your problem to you in laymen's terms, using spine models or pictures, or at least easier analogies. Demand an explanation - it's your right. Good luck, I know what the pain feels like!
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PainPhysician

New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 02 Jan 2006
Posts: 6
Location: Ohio

Posted: 01-02-06 14:39pm

Your findings say you have a tear of the outer ring of your disc at l4. The annulus (outer ring) has many nerve fibers that live within it. This can be the cause of your pain. If the pain is in your low back, epidural injections or facet injections may help. However, there if these dont, they may want to perform a discogram which is diagnostic test in which they put a small needle into the suspect disc and inject some contrast agent. They measure whether or not the injection reproduces your pain. If it does, then they can make the diagnosis of discogenic pain. The treatment of discogenic pain varies, but there is something called an idet (intradiscal electrothermal therapy) that they may offer.

If the pain is radiating into the legs past the knee, epidural injections would be the first line therapy.


You can find more information about these procedures at: www.Painphysicians.Org

good luck to you!

Rg
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BigJoe

New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 23 Dec 2005
Posts: 7
Location: New England

Posted: 01-02-06 14:52pm

Along those lines, painphysician, I keep hearing about how epidural steroid injections are good for a while, and then "wear off". Is there any consensus on how long one can expect relief from these injections? I understand how they are supposed to reduce inflammation at the disc, but i'm wondering if they can last long enough for any meaningful healing process to take place. I'm sure that poor body mechanics, etc. Can make it worse.
I'm wondering if an epidural gives a meaningful chance at recovery, or is surgery an inevitable event.
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PainPhysician

New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 02 Jan 2006
Posts: 6
Location: Ohio

Posted: 01-02-06 15:36pm

Big joe,

you are correct in that epidural injections have only shown to give temporary relief. The pharmacologic life of the medication injected is quite short. However, for some reason that we dont know of, in some cases, the relief from such injections far outlives the pharmcologic life of the medication. Is it because of the body healing itself? Is there some other effect that the steroid has that we dont understand? I wish I had an answer. If someone gets 3 months relief with an injection, I consider this a very successful injection. Anything longer is just luck. As a caveat, I do also have patients who swear that i've cured their pain ( I know this is isnt true)... But if they want to believe it, then go ahead! So joe, to answer your question, well I dont have an answer. However, if the choice is to be in pain or try something that might work... Than I say go for it. Epidurals in the lumbar area are considered benign procedures. However, if you are getting injections in the thoracic or cervical areas, be careful. There are some potentially disastrous complications from those.

Good luck!

More information available on www.Painphysicians.Org
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BigJoe

New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 23 Dec 2005
Posts: 7
Location: New England

Posted: 01-02-06 19:54pm

Thank you for your reply. I've been trying very hard since my epidural(l4-l5, s1) to move correctly, perform the stretching excersises prescribed, avoid lifting heavy objects, avoid twisting motions, etc. I feel about 85% back to normal, and I surely don't want to experience the leg pain I had previously. I'm hoping that by behaving myself (my term), I can give my back a fighting chance to heal and avoid surgery.
I'm sorry this got off the original topic, but I appreciate the input. Hopefully someone else can learn something from my experience.
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heather029

New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 19 Dec 2005
Posts: 27
Location: Mississippi

Posted: 01-05-06 02:27am

Thank you for responding to my post. Just yesterday I had the facet block done and it did nothing for me. The gave me a total of six shots and I feel the same as I did. I've done pt, had an extremely painful esi, facet blocks, tens unit, lidocaine injections. Nothing is helping this pain of mine.

A discogram is scheduled for the 12th. I'm so anxious about this particular test i'm sure i'll make myself sick over it. I can obviously handle pain, but not where i'm practically incapable of moving for the potential of the risk, and yet again being at the mercy of someone else who is doing this to me, although they are trying to help me.

I'm just so tired of hurting. And I suppose hypersensitive to it.

Heather
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disabledcoastie

Experienced User , Rather EHEALTHy
Joined: 13 Dec 2005
Posts: 68
Location: West Virginia

Posted: 01-05-06 12:23pm

Heather,

i have had a discogram and they are no where as painful as people report. I had little discomfort, (this may however be due to the amount of pain I was already int), and the study showed two bad discs. Good luck on your tests.
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snehasaha

New User, Becoming EHEALTHy
Joined: 16 Jun 2007
Posts: 2
Location: india

Posted: 06-16-07 10:59am

wat is loss of cervical lordosis???
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