I was excited to read the posts concerning pain on the left side under the rib cage.
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I have suffered from this for two years. I have other issues, several herniated cervical discs and have had a great deal of alternative treatment. I have been able to function fairly well until about two years ago began experiencing pain under the left shoulder blade, very sharp, sometimes travelling, kind of spreading across the back. A year ago last September I had a nerve release in my left shoulder since nerve conduction tests revealed a compressed nerve which the pain dr believed could be the culprit. During the surgery my left lung was pierced, collapsed and filled with two liters of fluid. I wakened on a ventilator and needed a chest tube for several days to drain the lung. I did made a strong recovery and numberous chest x-rays show that my lung recovered. But the pain has continued. It is not constant, but intermittent and it is always present following exertion. I used to attend water excercise classes every day and I now find the pressure of the water feels the way I think shingles must feel! I would love ideas from others - I have also had massage, acupunture, etc. For the last nine months I have had monthly cortisone injections in that area. This helps more than anything but I am worried about the amount of steriod in my system. Thank you in advance for responding!!
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beth4700 kathryn28939
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I have acute thoracic neuropathy from lung surgery. It happens 1 out of 100 times they say. I was always an athletic person and walked 6 miles a day on my treadmill...besides working 80 and up hours weekly. Now I'm on full disability and feel like I'm 90!!!! Do repetitive tasks make your side "cramp' ? Doctor's who do this surgery and this happens DO NOT Admit for a moment that this has happened. Please go to another lung surgeon and find out if this has happened to you. It is an extemely dibilitating problem. I had the 2nd best surgeon in thus country finally tell me what my issue was after 8 agonizing years of this If this is what you issue is, I can tell you that it will only progressively get worse. I also have a dystrophy you can also get from surgery called reflex sympathetic dystrophy. This is where the sympathetic nerves that tell your brain you're injured don't turn off once you're healed. I have this in my chest wall. There are blocks you can do for both of these issues however, with the dystrophy, needles, further injury, etc. Can exasperate the dystrophy. I would also find out about this as well. Hopefully neither are your issue for God's sake. I don't want to alarm you , but it doesn't sound like the doctor did such a bang up job on you. Seek a second opinion . The earlier you are able to address this if it is nerve damage, the better chances you have of repairing the issue . The longer you wait the less and less hope and the more pain will follow. I hope this isn't your case but please do get a second opinion.
kathryn28939
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pauline59158 kathryn28939
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I was interested to know why this was posted into the Stroke and TIA Forum?
beth4700 pauline59158
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kathryn28939 beth4700
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pauline59158 beth4700
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Guest beth4700
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