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Semi-Elective Cervical Disc Replacements for Cervical Myelopathy: A Qualitative Study.

Simon D Taylor-RobinsonGuglielmo Trovato
Published in: Patient preference and adherence (2021)
Cervical disc prolapse can be accompanied by severe pain, numbness, paraesthesiae and muscle weakness. The choice lies between a conservative approach with physiotherapy and pain modulating drugs, such as gabapentin, or a more active surgical approach, ranging from nerve decompression through vertebral foraminotomy through to cervical disc replacement. We relate the experience of a medically qualified patient in having disc prolapse at three cervical levels and what it was like to experience a lonely and difficult post-surgical recovery. Despite this, the patient would still choose active surgical decompression over a non-interventional approach. The reasons for this are discussed from the patient perspective, of which there is little directly in the medical literature.
Keyphrases
  • case report
  • neuropathic pain
  • systematic review
  • pain management
  • spinal cord
  • minimally invasive
  • patients undergoing
  • skeletal muscle
  • spinal cord injury
  • signaling pathway