ERSS
Well-known member
I have been basically healthy all my life ( 48 yo now ), other than a fall off a house with some broken bones several years ago, I have never been a patient in a hospital, been on medications, nothing. I always felt like I could lift more than should be able to for my size, whether that was weightlifting when I was younger, moving bags of cement, moving rocks for landscaping, whatever. I would occasionally, a few times a year, tweak my back and walk a little sideways for a few days and then be good to go. In December of last year this same tweak happened, except it never went away. Initial injury was helping my daughter move, and then aggravated by months of shoveling snow and digging out snow machines, and then some new appliance purchases and rotation of appliances between a couple of residences. Finally in Feb, it was bad. Went to chiropractor for first time in my life with no relief. In late March, something happened ( herniated disc ), whole left leg was either the worst pain I had felt, numb or nagging dull ache. Chiropractor ordered MRI, diagnosis = herniated L4-L5 disc, solution microdiscectomy surgery. Had to continue working and do some traveling for work, so a corticosteroid injection in my back reduced pain and limitation by about 50%. Had the surgery on April 17th and walked out feeling like I got my leg back, felt like a million bucks. Within 3 days was having no issues with pain, tingling, etc.. That Saturday, 5 days after surgery, I did a little shed hunting and felt great. After a good non-symptomatic work week, I was a little more active last Saturday - more than I should have been ( this was definitely my fault, not the surgeon ) - which resulted in a reherniation of the same disc. Twice the pain this time, never felt like such a baby in my life. Two injections, and an MRI later....I was scheduled for a repeat of same surgery for today. Due to insurance delay it was cancelled today, and rescheduled for Monday.
The way I understand it, and after talking with my surgeon, usually 2-3 of these microdiscectomies, and then looking at an L4-L5 fusion.
Interested if anyone else has had the same or similar issues, what your outcomes have been and any lessons learned
Appreciate any input
The way I understand it, and after talking with my surgeon, usually 2-3 of these microdiscectomies, and then looking at an L4-L5 fusion.
Interested if anyone else has had the same or similar issues, what your outcomes have been and any lessons learned
Appreciate any input