Guest guest Posted October 30, 2007 Report Share Posted October 30, 2007 You mentioned peripheral neropathy and that your feet were numb. We just came home from the neurosurgeon who said my husband had spinal stenosis and something about his peripheral vein. He cant move his feet and cant walk at all. The dr sent him for additional x-rays of his spine and we have to go back on Friday. He indicated surgery. He works with another dr who he conferred with. Would you get another opinion. I'm just wondering if they will suggest to do this immediately before it gets worse. He's not in any pain. Any advice would be appreciated. --------Cheryl in AZ moderator wrote: About a month ago my " good " foot/leg became completely paralyzed because of what turned out to be a peripheral neuropathy in my knee - it has recovered a lot, but I'll always have some loss there too now. The sad truth is that I was always clumsy, so I can't blame all the tripping and stumbling on my feet! <gg> Hope you find this group helpful. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 30, 2007 Report Share Posted October 30, 2007 --- Nineteen2@... wrote: > > You mentioned peripheral neropathy and that your feet were numb. We just came home from the neurosurgeon who said my husband had spinal stenosis and something about his peripheral vein. He cant move his feet and cant walk at all. > > The dr sent him for additional x-rays of his spine and we have to go back on Friday. He indicated surgery. He works with another dr who he conferred with. Would you get another opinion. Hi Nineteen - I'm sorry to hear about your husband's problems. I've never even heard of a " peripheral vein, " so I'm sorry I can't offer any insight. My most recent problem was due to damage in a very specific nerve in my knee - the peroneal nerve - not due to anything in my back like my stenosis. They did assume that it was my back at first (they thought a disk had herniated) and were intending to do surgery immediately to try to recover movement in the foot, but they were completely wrong! Thankfully I didn't go through with the surgery - that would have been tragic. So, I would *definitely* get a second opinion before going through with any back surgery. If all they've done are x-rays, that's not enough. I'm not a doctor, but in my own experience they should have also have MRIs, possibly a catscan, and an EMG-Nerve Conduction Study to help diagnose the exact location of the damage. They actually put me in the hospital for four days of testing etc with a bunch of different doctors - neurosurgeons and neurologists both - working on diagnosing my case I became suddenly completely paralyzed in one leg/foot. I'm frankly surprised they aren't treating your husband's case more as an emergency like they did mine. Has he been this way long? If it came on suddenly, if he is actually completely paralyzed and not just numb, and/or if he is having bladder/bowel problems as well - those are all signs that this is an emergency situation. But don't let that stop you from getting a second opinion - even in the hospital you can request another opinion and they can bring in another surgeon to look at the films independently of the first. Good luck. I hope you find answers soon. Cheryl in AZ Moderator Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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