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Clinical Course
This 39 year old male injured his back at work when he bent over and lifted
a large pallet weighing 60 pounds and felt immediate pain in the right
leg. He tried to continue to work but after a month was unable to continue.
When he was referred for surgical consultation, he had severe right leg
pain in a sciatic nerve distribution, weakness in his leg when walking
and rated his pain as 9 on a scale of 10. 90% of the pain was localized
in his leg and 10% in his back. On physical exam, raising his right leg
caused severe pain in his right leg. His treatment consisted of physical
therapy, narcotics, muscle relaxants and epidural steroid injections without
relief of his symptoms.
Diagnostic Tests
His MRI scan was consistent with a left L5-S1 disc herniation. Due to
the dominant right leg pain and clear history and physical exam, further
diangostic testing with a lumbar myelogram and contrast C.A.T. scan was
performed revealing the disc herniation to be central and more right sided
than left sided.
Decision
Two points are clear with this presentation: the MRI is not always an
accurate reflection of the clinical circumstance and a patient does not
necessarily have to have surgery on the side of the spine not causing
symptoms even if there is a suggestion of abnormality in the area.
Surgical Treatment
A lumbar microsurgical discectomy was used to decompress the S1 nerve
and the extruded fragment was removed. The patient did well after surgery
with complete resolution of the leg pain.
Surgeon's Comment
The patient had surgery about 4 months after the onset of his leg pain
which is still in an optimum range for good results from surgery. He never
experienced leg pain on the left side and his initial MRI suggested that
the disc herniation was more left sided. This clearly didn't fit the clinical
picture of this patient warranting further diagnostic testing. Microsurgery
was a good fit for this patient with decompression of the nerve easily
accompished.
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