Cases reported "Radiculopathy"

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1/11. Use of cervical spine manipulation under anesthesia for management of cervical disk herniation, cervical radiculopathy, and associated cervicogenic headache syndrome.

    OBJECTIVE: To demonstrate the benefits of cervical spine manipulation with the patient under anesthesia as an approach to treating a patient with chronic cervical disk herniation, associated cervical radiculopathy, and cervicogenic headache syndrome. CLINICAL FEATURES: The patient had neck pain with radiating paresthesia into the right upper extremity and incapacitating headaches and had no response to 6 months of conservative therapy. Treatment included spinal manipulative therapy, physical therapy, anti-inflammatory medication, and acupuncture. magnetic resonance imaging, electromyography, and somatosensory evoked potential examination all revealed positive diagnostic findings. INTERVENTION AND OUTCOME: Treatment included 3 successive days of cervical spine manipulation with the patient under anesthesia. The patient had immediate relief after the first procedure. Her neck and arm pain were reported to be 50% better after the first trial, and her headaches were better by 80% after the third trial. Four months after the last procedure the patient reported a 95% improvement in her overall condition. CONCLUSION: Cervical spine manipulation with the patient under anesthesia has a place in the chiropractic arena. It is a useful tool for treating chronic discopathic disease complicated by cervical radiculopathy and cervicogenic headache syndrome. The beneficial results of this procedure are contingent on careful patient selection and proper training of qualified chiropractic physicians.
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2/11. Static magnetic field therapy for pain in the abdomen and genitals.

    Two adolescents with debilitating, medication-resistant, chronic pain of the low back and abdomen with intermittent pain of the genitalia were diagnosed with intervertebral disk disease at spinal cord levels that correlated with their signs. Both patients had undergone multiple evaluations by physicians of different specialties and both underwent appendectomy without relief of their pain. The history of the onset of pain was important in determining the affected levels. The pain of both individuals was mimicked and localized by percussion of the vertebral spines at the level of disk protrusion. This maneuver and careful review of the history were important in making the correct diagnosis in each case. In both patients, treatment with novel magnetic devices provided rapid relief that was sustained for more than 2 years. These cases highlight the need for careful evaluation and correct diagnosis of abdominal and genital pain in young patients to avoid costly and unnecessary medical intervention and the stigma of painful debility.
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3/11. Tarlov cyst as a rare cause of S1 radiculopathy: A case report.

    A 37-year-old female physician presented with a chief complaint of left posterior thigh pain, which began insidiously approximately 4 months before her initial examination. Initially, she had been evaluated by her physician, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was ordered. The MRI scan was reported to be within normal limits, with the exception of minimal disc bulging at L4-5. She had received physical therapy with little benefit and was referred for physiatric assessment. review of the patient's original MRI scan showed the presence of perineurial (Tarlov) cysts within the sacral canal at the level of S2, with compression of the adjacent nerve root. Subsequent electrodiagnostic testing showed axonal degeneration consistent with an S1 radiculopathy. tarlov cysts can be a rare cause of lumbosacral radiculopathy and should be considered in the differential diagnosis of radicular leg pain.
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4/11. Diagnostic selective nerve root blocks: indications and usefulness.

    Diagnostic SNRIs are a useful tool in the diagnosis of radicular pain in atypical presentations. Diagnostic SNRI is indicated in the following circumstances: (1) for atypical extremity pain; (2) when imaging studies and clinical presentation do not correlate; (3) when electromyography and MRI are not corroborative or are equivocal; (4) for anomalous innervations, such [figure: see text] as conjoint nerve roots or furcal nerves [71]; (5) for failed back surgery syndrome with atypical extremity pain; and (6) for transitional vertebrae. patients should have demonstrated a failure to improve with less invasive treatment. In these patients, a diagnostic SNRI may localize the pain to a specific spinal nerve. It must be emphasized that the diagnostic SNRI only determines if pain is emanating from a specific nerve root or spinal nerve. A diagnostic SNRI does not determine what has caused the nerve root or spinal nerve pain, nor does it provide prognostic information. The etiology of the nerve root pain, mechanism of injury, underlying anatomy, duration of symptoms, comorbidities, patient desire, physician skill, and a host of other factors determine the appropriate treatment and prognosis.
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5/11. Resolution of pronounced painless weakness arising from radiculopathy and disk extrusion.

    In this retrospective, consecutive case series, we report the nonsurgical and rehabilitation outcomes of consecutive patients who presented with pronounced painless weakness arising from disk extrusion. Seven consecutive patients who chose physiatric care were followed clinically, and strength return was monitored. Each presented with predominantly painless radiculopathy, functionally significant strength loss, and radiographic evidence of disk extrusion or sequestration. Each patient participated in a targeted strengthening program, and in some cases, transforaminal injection therapy was employed. Each patient demonstrated an eventual full functional recovery. In most cases, electrodiagnostic studies were performed and included a needle examination of the affected limb and compound muscle action potentials from the most clinically relevant and weakened limb muscle. The electrodiagnostic findings and, in particular, the quantitative compound muscle action potential data seemed to correlate with the timing of motor recovery. patients with predominantly painless and significant weakness arising from disk extrusion can demonstrate successful rehabilitation outcomes. Despite a relative absence of pain, such patients can present with a more rapidly reversible neurapraxic type of weakness. The more quantitative compound muscle action potential data obtained through electrodiagnostic studies may offer the treating physician an additional means of characterizing the type of neuronal injury at play and the likelihood and timing of strength return.
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6/11. Herniated disc with radiculopathy following cervical manipulation: nonsurgical management.

    BACKGROUND CONTEXT: Spinal manipulation applied to the cervical spine is a relatively safe and effective treatment for neck pain and headache. However, complications of this form of treatment have been reported and these can at times be disabling and on rare occasions can be devastating. A postmanipulation complication being treated with a different form of manipulation has not previously been reported. PURPOSE: To report a case of a patient who was treated with manipulation and who developed neck, scapular, and arm pain and arm numbness after the sixth visit, which was later attributed to three herniated discs. The patient was subsequently treated with a nonsurgical approach that included, but was not limited to, a different form of manipulation with apparent resolution of the problem. STUDY DESIGN/SETTING: The patient was a 38-year-old banker who began seeing a chiropractic physician for treatment that included cervical manipulation. On the sixth visit, he developed pain immediately after treatment which became severe and was accompanied by numbness in his arm. He saw a neurosurgeon who recommended surgery, but was subsequently seen by a different chiropractic physician and was treated nonsurgically. methods: The patient was found to have clinical signs of radiculopathy, including motor loss. magnetic resonance imaging revealed disc herniations at C3-C4, C4-C5, and C5-C6. RESULTS: The patient was treated by the author with an alternate approach that included non-high-velocity, low-amplitude manipulation and exercise with resolution of the problem. CONCLUSION: This paper reports a case of a patient with radiculopathy secondary to multilevel disc herniations that appeared to be precipitated by cervical manipulation and who was treated nonsurgically with resolution of the problem. It is doubtful that the manipulation actually caused the disc herniations, but it is possible that it caused preexisting asymptomatic disc herniations to become symptomatic. Consideration should be given to nonsurgical referral of patients who have postmanipulative complications but do not need immediate surgery.
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7/11. adamantinoma of the spine: case report.

    OBJECTIVE: We report a patient with a cervicothoracic spinal and a mandibular adamantinoma. adamantinoma is a rare malignant neoplasm of bone and, to our knowledge, there have been only five cases of spinal adamantinoma reported. The pathogenesis of the adamantinoma, as well as the management of this extremely rare spinal tumor, is reviewed. CLINICAL PRESENTATION: A 55-year-old man was admitted to our service with cervical pain and signs of C8 and T1 radiculopathy. On physical examination, cervical spine deformity, swelling in the left mandible region, and signs of C8 and T1 radiculopathy were observed. Neuroradiology examinations showed an osteolytic mass of the C6, C7, and T1 vertebral bodies, extending into the lateral masses and transverse processes. After surgical procedures, the patient had clinical improvement. INTERVENTION: Corpectomy of C6, C7, and T1 was performed through a cervicothoracic anterior approach. Anterior stabilization of the spine was obtained using an autologous iliac crest graft and osteosynthesis with an anterior plate. On a second procedure, posterior tumor resection and spinal stabilization were performed. After the 1-year follow-up examination, a new anterior procedure was performed because of tumor recidivity and spine instability. CONCLUSION: adamantinoma, an extremely rare lesion, is a locally aggressive tumor with slow growth and the potential to metastasize. Although it is an extremely rare occurrence in the spine, adamantinoma should be considered on the diagnosis of tumors of the vertebrae. Neuroradiological examinations are not specific in the differentiation of this tumor from other conditions. This fact, coupled with the limited experience that most physicians in general have in dealing with this tumor, makes the diagnosis and treatment of adamantinoma challenging.
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8/11. Clinical value of electrodiagnostic studies in neuromuscular disorders.

    EMG and conduction studies provide the physician with a precise means of defining the multiple diseases affecting the peripheral motor-sensory unit. These studies frequently provide clues that may be useful in arriving at the appropriate therapeutic decisions and in determining prognosis. Normal results may also support a suspected clinical diagnosis of inorganic illness, providing no evidence of central nervous system disease can be defined. Like any other test, however, results of EMG may be false-negative in bona fide neuromuscular disorders. This is particularly true early in a disease process; in neuropathies restricted primarily to small, unmyelinated nerve fibers; and in certain of the less virulent diseases of muscle and muscle energy metabolism.
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9/11. A manual therapy approach to evaluation and treatment of a patient with a chronic lumbar nerve root irritation.

    The purpose of this case report is to familiarize the reader with the basic principles of the approach to manual therapy evaluation and treatment pioneered by Maitland, an Australian physical therapist. This approach involves a complete subjective examination to determine the severity, irritability, nature, and stage of the patient's complaints. In this way, the therapist may reach conclusions as to the amount and vigor of the physical examination and proceed with treatment in an analytical manner. Methodical reassessment is used to justify treatment progression. Comprehensive treatment and the rationale for this approach are discussed. Though most physical therapists are familiar with the straight-leg-raising test as a means of assessing low back pain and chronic lumbar nerve root irritation, they are often not familiar with other tests that examine neural tissues, such as the slump test. The proposed anatomical and biomechanical bases for these tests are discussed. The patient in this case study was a 50-year-old man with a physician's diagnosis of a chronic lumbar nerve root irritation. The patient was evaluated and treated in eight visits using techniques designed to evaluate neural tissues. Reassessment indicated significant symptom reduction, and the treatment was modified accordingly. Patient management, including home exercises, is discussed.
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10/11. Lumbosacral radiculopathy secondary to L5 metastatic melanoma of unknown primary.

    Lumbosacral radiculopathy secondary to spinal malignancy is rare. Spinal melanoma without cutaneous manifestations is even more unusual. We present the case of a 45-year-old physician with a history of degenerative disease of lumbar spine and chronic back pain who presented with increasing back pain with right radiculopathy despite conservative management for 6 months. Computed tomography showed a destructive lesion of the L5 vertebral body. Results from a biopsy guided by computed tomography suggested neoplasm of unknown origin. The patient underwent anterior vertebrectomy with instrumentation and fusion. Surgical pathology study results showed metastatic melanoma of unknown primary. The patient had no cutaneous manifestation of the disease. This is the first reported case of radiculopathy due to melanoma metastatic to the lumbar spine. In view of the atypical presentation of our patient's malignancy, we emphasize the importance of including malignancy of lumbar spine in the differential diagnosis of progressive lower back pain with radiculopathy.
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