Cervical spondylosis: Q and A from a patient and healthcare worker
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Hello all,
I am a 25 year old male nurse with cervical spondylosis or cervical arthritis. This was due from a weight lifting accident that led to the loss of cushion between my vertebra. For the past 2 years, I have been in fairly debilitating pain but have managed through a few techniques.
First thing is first, only consider surgery if you are young, healthy, and able candidate for elective surgery. But I will employ, do not allow the pain to overtake your life and have you addicted to narcotics.
For one, narcotics may dull the pain but they are not slowing the progression of the process itself. Arthritis or anything with the word (itis) of any type means inflammation. No narcotic or pain reliever is going to have anti inflammatory properties unless you take for instance, Vicoprofen. Which is the analgesic (pain reliever opioid Vicodin) with an anti inflammatory (ibuprofen).
Surgeries used to help on areas can be anything from a laminotomy, foraminotomy, kyphoplasty, decompression, or all of the above. The goal of the surgery is to fix the underlying cause of pain. If you have tingling and numbness, maybe they will perform a laminotomy if the nerve that is be compressed is in the lamina portion of the spine, which is creating spinal stenosis and has caused that nerve to become impinged. Maybe you are suffering from constant burning/throbbing pain, crackling neck sounds, headaches that start from the neck, and pain all the way in your shoulders. Possibly a cervical decompression and fusion. Basically taking away that bone that is starting to fuse with the second lower vertebra, lifting it up to create space and placing some of a graft taken from your bone marrow (typically from the hip) and placing that in to create a new disc (the cushion needed that has been lost) and fusing the two bones back with a metal plate.
Those are all just examples of surgeries and what could take place.
What I am here to do is give helpful hints of what makes me feel better whenever I have a flare up.
-Keeping warm and not cold.
-Maintaining an upright posture.
-Plenty of fluids
-Limiting my intake of calcium. Calcium is vital for us but too much ingestion leads to higher concentrations and a faster rate of bone growth. We are trying to slow the progression those osteophytes or bone spurs.
-Anti inflammatory medications. In low dosages. No popping them like candy. Ibuprofen should be taken as prescribed on the pill bottle.
-Glucosamine/Chondrointin has been helpful. I've noticed it works best for me at night.
-Stretches 3x daily. I will publish on here the stretches and my methods that work best.
-Working out. I will give more information on this also.
Thanks for the read and hope everyone starts to feel better soon!
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kaye50411 joseph_26110
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joseph_26110 kaye50411
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Gerry_the_neck joseph_26110
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joseph_26110 Gerry_the_neck
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patricia05186 joseph_26110
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joseph_26110 patricia05186
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Gerry_the_neck patricia05186
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I agree with what you're saying there. Some of us 'long termers' get used to seeing pain as a limitations marker, rather than as a sign of negative progression. It's a different mindset almost, which evolves naturally according to the experience. In fact, the more expectations we have to have a 'normal' lifestyle just goes against the grain , and makes the aches and pains feel worse. Whereas, living within the limitations offers up a less complicated mindset.
patricia05186 joseph_26110
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michelle52302 joseph_26110
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