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01-11-2020 11:35 AM
I have a history of herniated cervical discs and for the past 2 weeks I have numbness in my left arm/hand. I am sure it is the discs because the numbness is positional. For instance, when I sit and lean to look at the computer and when I lay on my right side. 10 years ago, I was almost headed into surgery with this but PT helped and they did not do surgery. I have a doctors appointment this week and I fear surgery is going to be an option for me. Has anyone had back surgery lately? I am interested in the recovery time? I work at home so I don't have to drive. I am curious how fast I can get back to work. I have a new job that I want to keep. Thanks for all your thoughts and input in advance.
01-11-2020 11:41 AM
Don't jump the gun. There is a lot room between numb and surgery. Right now my pinkie and ring fingers are numb, but we are treating it.
01-11-2020 11:50 AM
My DH had mircrodiscectomy surgery in 2004, he had no other options, he was totally immobile. Surgery was outpatient , we were back home in just a few hours and his recovery was literally a piece of cake, and no problems since. I wish you luck!
01-11-2020 12:01 PM
I too would not be thinking surgery just yet.
My former co-worker had surgery for herniated disc 2 years ago; procedure was on Monday, and she came home Wednesday. The hospital was a 2 hour drive from where she lives, and she tolerated the car ride very well. She was quite sore, moved at turtle speed for 3 weeks, and was not mentally prepared for as much pain. My friend learned quickly to take the medication and stay ahead of the pain! Somewhere around week 4 was when she began to feel more normal.
01-11-2020 01:39 PM
I think there are a many things they might try besides a discectomy, which I assume is the surgery you are referring to. See the doctor first and find out what your next steps and options are. Also, have a discussion with him. Let him know that at this point, with a new job recovery time is a factor for you.
01-11-2020 01:43 PM
Not sure where you reside but here in FL we have BioSpine.
People come from all over.
Its less than 1/4 inch incision and you come home the same day/
They say in 3 days you are back in business.
Getting ready to do it myself....
01-11-2020 04:05 PM
@pieman Oh wow, I just looked the Biospine Institute up. It seems like they have it going on. Of course I don't want surgery, I just know from my past experience that surgery is going to be an option. I am sure they are going to have to do a MRI to see what is going on. I am miserable right now depending on how I move my body my lower L arm; and hand get numb. I have a long history of herniated discs. It is no fun. I actually live only 1 1/2 hours from Orlando. I know my doctor told me once that if I ever need spinal surgery that I am going to a spinal surgeon out of Baptist Heath in Jacksonville. He has had surgery himself 3 different times from this doctor. I know the doctor is highly rated. It is a lot to think about. I remember 10 years ago, the neurologist told me that I was not going to be able to avoid surgery forever. At the time it was a neurosurgeon at the University of Florida, Gainesville who suggested PT. The PT worked for me, the neurologist was not happy. I could also see a doctor in Gainesville, at UF, I also have the Mayo Clinic very close in Jacksonville.
01-11-2020 05:05 PM
my son, 41yrs. just had op surgery for bulging disc pressing on sciatic was in pain and numb in lt. arm and leg. his surgery was in the am and he was home by 4pm. he is doing great and back to work, on light duty.
01-11-2020 07:34 PM
One's body changes a lot in 10 years, as do the medical procedures and treatments. You say "cervical discs" and you ask about "back surgery", which are the "lumbar area of the back". My friend specializes in both, and he does all the Micro surgeries in his Spinal Group of Doctors.
You didn't mention anything about a recent MRI, and without having that done, I doubt any reputable surgeon will make a decision on what is in your best interest. If any surgeon says "surgery" without seeing one's latest MRI? I would be out the door.
I have 3 Crushed Vertebrae in the Cervical area of my neck. This happened back in the early 1970's, and I have dealt with them without surgery for decades. Another good friend of mine, who has since died, was a Chiropractor and he was able to get me through some very tough and painful times.
For the most part, now they only effect me seriously, very rarely. I've worked all these years on strengthening my neck muscles, and also keeping them as flexible as I can. My left arm still goes numb on occasion and I do have some shoulder pain.
I have had 2 back surgeries over the years. The 1st to remove my ruptured L-5/S-1 Lumbar Discs, the 2nd to remove a ruptured L-3 Lumbar disc. Have not effected me in any way from living my high paced and active lifestyle.
My Spinal Surgeon friend has done an MRI and asked me if it really was painful enough to surgery. I said, not yet. He told me with my situation surgery, at best would be 50-50. For me it is not worth it unless it starts to effect my present active way of life. If so, then I will decide.
As for recovery? Everyone is different because of age/physical condition/health/their normal activities, and on and on. My latest surgery was a Hernia Surgery. My Surgeon told me 4-8 weeks before ice skating. My 1st follow up visit I talked him into 2 weeks, and I did just fine. Didn't skate "all out" but it was just a matter of not pushing it. My next visit he gave me the "all clear". He said if you can handle the pain, it won't disturb the surgery.
Keep us posted.
hckynut
01-11-2020 07:48 PM - edited 01-11-2020 07:51 PM
@hckynut I had back surgery L5-S1 and I was in constant pain. I did not want to believe I had a hierniated disc. The only option was phys. therapy which ended up pushing the disc out more and then I needed emergency back surgery. Lucky me had the Director of Neurosurgery at U of CA in San Francisco. I never had any problems and the pain was gone. When the disc pushed out more from PT, tingling started in both feet and then the left leg up to the knee was numb and then the right leg was numb. It's scary when you lose feeling and have non stop tingling. The only thing that usually is an option is PT. You need to have a dr. you have faith in too.
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