Depending on where the herniation is (cervical = neck, thoracic = upper back or lumbar = lower back) and the severity of the herniation, there can be various symptoms. Also, pain is very personal and subjective so how one person perceives their pain may be different from another. A CT scan or MRI can confirm herniation at any level.
Here's how many of my patients have described their pain: Anywhere from intermittent to constant in duration, mild to severe in intensity, aching, sharp, stabbing, burning or throbbing (or any combination) pain. Almost all complain of radiating numbness into the upper or lower extremities. Many will also complain of numbness and tingling to the extremities. Some will also experience weakness and loss of grasp or leg give out. Thoracic and lumbar herniation: more severe and typically requiring immediate surgical intervention will report loss of bowel and/or bladder control. Cervical herniations: several complain of headaches with or without changes to their vision and hearing, nausea and vomiting.
If you suspect a spinal injury, I highly recommend that you speak with a qualified medical physician, preferably an orthopedist, spinal specialist or neurosurgeon.
2006-12-15 20:46:03
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answer #1
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answered by cgspitfire 6
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Depending on the area of the herniation will determine what you will feel.. it can be a localized or radiating pain along the course of the nerves affected. If it is low back will generally trace the sciatic or femoral nerve along its entire pathway.. but having those symptoms does not in itself indicate a herniation.
2006-12-15 23:19:01
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answer #2
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answered by mrcricket1932 6
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discomfort is the sole element you ought to have. herniated discs contained in the cervical section are brought about by using tight neck muscle groups, for they pull the vertebrae alongside with adequate stress to reason the discs to fail. to eliminate the rigors you would be able to desire to unencumber your neck muscle groups and right here's a thank you to loose them up: Neck positioned your arms alongside your head so your thumbs are on the front of the muscle under your ear and your arms are on the back of the muscle in the back of your neck. Squeeze your thumb and arms mutually and carry. relax your physique. After approximately 30 to 40 5 seconds, once you don’t sense the muscle groups liberating to any extent further, slowly decrease your head so a ways as you may, launch the stress yet carry your neck diminished for yet another 30 seconds. For ultimate outcomes relax your physique first by using taking a deep breath and exhaling then proceed to be this unstressed.
2016-10-05 09:21:09
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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One standard test is to lay flat on your back and raise your leg- if it hurts like hades- you very likely have a herniated disk= you may also have pain in your hip- that travels down the leg- that is around L4 and 5- higher up you may have pain or numbness in upper extremeties- see md if so-D
2006-12-15 19:12:19
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answer #4
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answered by Debby B 6
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Could cause a tingly or numb sensation down an arm or leg.
2006-12-15 19:09:42
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Pressure and Pain in the area that the disc is herniated at. Please see your doctor.
2006-12-15 19:08:14
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answer #6
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answered by Rachel T. 2
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Prime symptom is lack of finger control producing mispellings.
2006-12-15 19:14:55
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Lengthy answer , check
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herniated_disc
and medicinenet.com
2006-12-15 19:18:01
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answer #8
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answered by kate 7
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