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Degenerative Disc Disease

Degenerative Disc Disease

Physicians

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What is Degenerative Disc Disease?

Your spine has a big job. It supports your entire body and protects your organs while letting you bend, twist, walk and run freely. It’s made up of small bones (vertebrae) stacked on top of each other with soft, flexible gel-filled discs in between.

Discs can bulge out of position or herniate, leaking fluid from the soft inner aspect of the disc through the tough outer membrane. Herniated discs are sometimes referred to as “slipped” or “ruptured.” You can have a bulging or herniated disc and never know it. But when a damaged disc impinges on a nerve, it can be painful. When worn-out discs cause back pain, you may be diagnosed with degenerative disc disease.

Common Causes of Degenerative Disc Disease

  • Normal wear and tear of aging. Discs naturally lose their sponginess over time, becoming drier and less flexible, causing vertebrae to move closer together and become irritated.
    Injury can cause disc slippage or tear.
  • Lifting heavy objects improperly, such as using your back instead of your legs to move a heavy box.
    Being overweight; added pounds can put pressure on spinal discs.
  • Repetitive movement, such as having a job that involves lifting or twisting can increase your risk of degenerative disc disease.
  • Genetics. Some people, based on their DNA, are more prone to degenerative disc disease than others. Everyone’s spinal discs wear out over time, but the condition isn’t painful for everyone.
  • Smoking. Tobacco smoking decreases blood supply to the spinal discs which increases the risk of disc tears and herniation.

Symptoms of Degenerative Disc Disease

Your symptoms can depend on where the damaged disc is located.

A degenerated disc in the lumbar (lower) part of the back can cause pain, tingling or numbness in your buttocks or legs.

If the damaged disc is in the cervical region (neck area), you may feel pain, tingling or numbness in your neck, shoulders and arms.

If a degenerated disc is in the middle of the back, opposite the chest, it can cause chest or stomach pain.

With severe forms of degenerative disc disease, moving around can be difficult. In critical cases, the bulging or herniated disc may affect the cauda equina nerve complex at the base of the spine, which can cause your legs to become weak or numb. You might also have bowel or bladder issues. Loss of bowel or bladder control is an emergency that requires immediate evaluation by a physician.

 

Best Treatment for Degenerative Disc Disease

If your pain is constant or interferes with your daily life, the orthopedic spine specialists at The Orthopedic Institute of New Jersey (OINJ) can help. The diagnostic process begins with a physical exam and evaluation, which will lead to the right diagnosis and a personalized treatment plan.

A physical exam helps determine the cause of the pain and where it’s coming from. Pain from degenerative disc disease often responds well to non-operative treatment, such as activity modification to avoid painful positions, over-the-counter anti-inflammatory medications, and physical therapy and home exercises to improve your core strength and posture.

In more severe cases, your spine doctor may order tests, such as an X-ray, a CT scan, MRI, and/or a myelogram--an X-ray or CT scan that follows the electrical pulses from a nerve as it travels to see its effect on the spine.

Other kinds medication can also be prescribed, such as anticonvulsants for radiating pain, muscle relaxants for muscle spasms and oral steroids or a cortisone injection to reduce swelling and inflammation to improve your range of movement with less pain.

Physical therapy can also be effective for most everyone with degenerative disc disease. If your bulging or herniated disc affects the cervical zone (your neck area), your OINJ back doctor may recommend a form of traction in which your head is pulled gently away from your neck to allow the bones to reposition. This manipulation gives the small bones in the neck space to spread.

Surgical Solutions for Degenerative Disc Disease

In rare cases, surgery may be recommended. Surgical treatment for lumbar degenerated disc disease depends on your symptoms as well as the extent of the degeneration. If your symptoms are primarily lumbar radiculopathy from a herniated disc pressing on your nerve root, then isolated removable of that disc (“discectomy”) may be all that is necessary. If the degenerated disc itself is causing back pain, then disc replacement or fusion of that level may be performed.

Healing Advice – Degenerative Disc Disease Fit Tips

 

 

OINJ PHYSICIAN’S ADVICE

MRI scans are critical for us to be able to evaluate your condition. MRI allows us to make a more precise anatomic diagnosis and recommend the right surgical technique.

Behnam Salari

Behnam Salari, MD, OINJ Spine Surgeon

Muscle relaxants can help for degenerative disc disease if your condition is presenting with muscle spasms.

Michael S. Gutkin

Michael S. Gutkin, MD, OINJ Physiatrist