Cauda Equina Syndrome
#1
Posted 10 June 2011 - 02:30 AM
Okay, I really do have questions........Cauda Equina Syndrome (as explained to me), is where the horsetail of nerves (outside of the spinal column) has been compressed by something and usually either limits mobility but sensation/feeling exists or vice versa, which is what my condition possesses. I have no feeling in the saddle area, the back of my thighs, back/front of my calves, heels, toes, outside, and most of the top of both feet. The Doctors and Physical Therapists all have said to give it time. Is there anyone out there that has had some or all sensation/feeling restored after 6-8 wks? Do I need to be concerned with my bowels dying, since my bowel movements are now once or twice a week instead of every day? Is there some type of disability supplement that I can apply for to help with medical bills and living expenses? I used to work two (very stressful) jobs, one job was 45-50hrs a week and the other was 20-24hrs a week and now I have started back with 20hrs total and am exhausted. Is Arachnoiditis definite with Cauda Equina Syndrome? The emergency surgery that was done was pretty much just the removal of the disc and the fragments of the disc that were in my horsetail, no fusion was done. Will I need a fusion or should I have a fusion or a replacement disc inserted later on? Is it possible to become pregnant and carry children safely? What can be done about embarrasing gas that never has a warning, but just happens? Again, I have no feeling in my saddle area, so I am concerned, scared, worried about intimacy. Does the feeling ever come back in the good areas? Am I at risk of losing all sensation/feeling below the waist or paralysis? Any answers, advice, encouragement, and/or kind words are welcomed. Thank you! Dianne
#2
Posted 10 June 2011 - 07:26 AM
Your description of CES sounds about right. My understanding is that spinal nerve roots are capable of some regeneration some of the time. But every case is different. There is no set pattern. Others will be able to answer with their own experiences regarding the points you raise.
Carpe Diem
#3
Posted 10 June 2011 - 07:42 AM
If im being totally honest i dont expect any of the numbness/loss of sensation to come back.This way i can get on with things and adapt.
Another factor is wether you was operated on in time. There is a 48 hour window where the damage has a better change of healing and recovery is higher to what degree i do not know.
I was numb for over 2 weeks before my op in similar areas to yourself so i figure i was well over the time frame. My surgeon explained that at the point of surgery his job was to prevent further damage not to repair existing damage.
I cant answer many of your questions but my understanding of CES is that loss of sensation goes side by side with the damage to the spinal cord from being compressed and all ties in with the impaired mobilty.
My OH and I had sex just a few weeks after my op, prob too soon but hey? I was very worried about having intercourse and how it would feel/not feel. I knew when i passed urine i never felt anything so i didnt expect it to feel the same.
Unfortunately i didnt and dont feel anything (penetration wise), its a strange sensation but after saying that, it was very comforting being intimate and close with my partner.I was very worried that he would not find me remotely attractive but this was my issue and not his.
I wear pads everyday on my knicks, its the only way to stay clean for me and i use baby wipes all the time. I bleed often at the back when i clean myself, i think im maybe over cleaning..i dont know but i do have sores there (sudocream is great), i think from wearing nappies in hospital.
Thankfully i do know when i need the loo and i can generally get there in time. I do take a lot of lactulose and senna morning and night.
I think for you, as i did and still am, you will learn about your body every day.Your sense of humour is your saving grace and strength of mind.I believe we are only given what we can cope with in life.
My advice is be strong and live each day as it comes. You will get down and its natural, its not a sign of weakness, we are only human after all.
Take care and all the best...message me anytime for a 'chat'.
jeannette x
#4
Posted 10 June 2011 - 03:43 PM
#5
Posted 10 June 2011 - 10:33 PM
#6
Posted 12 June 2011 - 10:38 AM
And like many i was told that he could not epair the damage all he could was prevent more.I have to learn to self cath and have bowel program and i do use a wheelchair but that by no account means you will be the same .( i had other complications due to a seperate condtion ~)
It is so hard to just wait and see and when someone says it you want to yell scream how long .But i got my head round accepting the worse and anything else is a bonus .
Just one day at a time and chat away on here .It has been my lifeline while i got my head round it all and there are quite a few of us with ces on the incomplete board
Tatiana can you get referal to a incontienace nurse to discuss your options ? i have now learnt to self cath and means less accidents and we are working on a bowel program to
#8
Posted 13 June 2011 - 11:11 PM
After my accident, which was caused by a tornado, while camping last July, I could barely feel my legs, couldn't pee or poop, couldn't feel my feet and ankles. The front of my legs had more sensation than the backs and my butt had none at all. Really, it felt like someone else's butt. In addition to the SCI, I had other broken bones, internal injuries all of which required surgeries of various types.
During the first few months of recovery, I regained a lot of sensation in my legs. Certainly not normal, but I had a lot of electrical type of snapping. Gradually, I started having better sensation, still with the front of my legs improving first.
After three months, I could suddenly pee again. Have no idea what happened. Then poop returned. I consulted a PT to get some exercises to strengthen the pelvic muscles. It's been getting better all the time and now, at 10 months post injury, I'm almost good as new in that regard.
Feeling kept coming back to my legs. I can now feel a razor on the back of my calf. My hamstrings started working at month six. I have more feeling in the bum area than before. Now, I know if I'm sitting on the dog, although I might not know it's the dog right away.
Feet may be the last to return. I could not go barefoot for the longest time because my feet couldn't tell if they were on carpet, wood floor or standing on the dog. Now, I can sense those things. I have a lot of sensation in the feet, both top and bottom, although it's not normal sensory yet.
Balance has been a problem because a lot of what we read for balance comes from our feet and ankles. It's getting better, though.
As you recover, you may not notice huge jolts of returned sensation and motor skills. Rather, you may notice little things and you might question whether they are even improvements or not. Then, one day, you suddenly realize that you can do a hamstring curl. Recovery from this type of injury is slow. I've been told that what you get back in two years is likely what you'll live with. It sounds like a lot of time in front of you, I know. However, you will improve as you go along. Things will get better.
Keep a journal, if you can. It will come in handy on days when you are just convinced that nothing has happened in ages. When you page back, you'll be able to see the progress. Keep a PT journal, too, so you can follow your strengthening and rehab progress.
I wish you the best, really I do. I know how hard it is to suddenly be derailed by something as traumatic as an SCI. However, you have a wealth of humor to keep you company. Use that humor and keep your head pointed to the positive.
#9
Posted 14 June 2011 - 08:10 AM
I hope/wish we are all able to improve in the same way?
Just wanted to ask how soon you were operated on after the injury occured, this seems to be an important factor in the potential recovery of the nerves.
thankyou
#10
Posted 14 June 2011 - 02:51 PM
Based on what everyone has told me, I thought that the recovery process would slow as time has gone on. However, I've found that not to be the case. I think my biggest gains have come within the last two months. It was really slow to start and I waited a long time for anything to happen. I was finally able to stand at 4.5 months, however for only a half-minute at a time and keeping a death grip on the counter. Two months later, I was making cakes in the kitchen and standing at the counter to do cooking and cleanup. Now, I don't even think of it.
Yeah, having that 'no two people are alike' is kinda hard because I'd love to be able to tell people, "This is how it'll go for you". I can only relay my own experience and hope that others have recovery kickins that get them moving along.
#11
Posted 14 June 2011 - 03:39 PM
Tatiana, on 10 June 2011 - 07:42 AM, said:
If im being totally honest i dont expect any of the numbness/loss of sensation to come back.This way i can get on with things and adapt.
Another factor is wether you was operated on in time. There is a 48 hour window where the damage has a better change of healing and recovery is higher to what degree i do not know.
I was numb for over 2 weeks before my op in similar areas to yourself so i figure i was well over the time frame. My surgeon explained that at the point of surgery his job was to prevent further damage not to repair existing damage.
I cant answer many of your questions but my understanding of CES is that loss of sensation goes side by side with the damage to the spinal cord from being compressed and all ties in with the impaired mobilty.
My OH and I had sex just a few weeks after my op, prob too soon but hey? I was very worried about having intercourse and how it would feel/not feel. I knew when i passed urine i never felt anything so i didnt expect it to feel the same.
Unfortunately i didnt and dont feel anything (penetration wise), its a strange sensation but after saying that, it was very comforting being intimate and close with my partner.I was very worried that he would not find me remotely attractive but this was my issue and not his.
I wear pads everyday on my knicks, its the only way to stay clean for me and i use baby wipes all the time. I bleed often at the back when i clean myself, i think im maybe over cleaning..i dont know but i do have sores there (sudocream is great), i think from wearing nappies in hospital.
Thankfully i do know when i need the loo and i can generally get there in time. I do take a lot of lactulose and senna morning and night.
I think for you, as i did and still am, you will learn about your body every day.Your sense of humour is your saving grace and strength of mind.I believe we are only given what we can cope with in life.
My advice is be strong and live each day as it comes. You will get down and its natural, its not a sign of weakness, we are only human after all.
Take care and all the best...message me anytime for a 'chat'.
jeannette x
#12
Posted 16 June 2011 - 05:57 PM
My life is beginning to take some pattern of normality, just with adjustments and more planning.
Spent some time this afternoon with my horses and as i sat in the sun watching my ponies in the field,there was lovely warm breeze blowing across my face and i thought to myself...im so lucky to able to enjoy this.
#13
Posted 21 June 2011 - 04:08 PM
#14
Posted 21 June 2011 - 10:03 PM
RE disability payments from SSI you should make an application with appropriate documentation.
The Social Security Administration will automatically reject your first application and tell you you may appeal. They do this because many people will get discouraged and not try. Make your appeal, and then they tell you they cannot pay unless you will be disabled for a year. Keep at it, and use a local representative as it means a lot for them to see you and talk to you. A human will believe you.
there are significant delays, but once you are approved they will pay you retroactively. I think to 5 months post injury.
Your stamina may improve- I hope so, but it does take time.
#15
Posted 29 June 2011 - 08:51 PM
#16
Posted 07 July 2011 - 12:54 PM
strawberry71, on 10 June 2011 - 02:30 AM, said:
#17
Posted 11 August 2011 - 03:19 AM
dmuir.slc, on 29 June 2011 - 08:51 PM, said:
#18
Posted 18 August 2011 - 05:52 PM
Just thought I'd give you an insight into 6 years post op! Fastest recovery was definitely in the first 6 months and very slow progress in the following 18 months, but nothing new since then, so what they say is pretty much right.
I still have problems walking far, but it's more muscle fatigue than anything else. Balance is pretty poor if my rhythm is interrupted (not good in crowds or trying to avoid obstacles), but the main thing that I have found with regards to this is, if you have movement, then you need to practise everything over and over and, eventually, you will get it right. For example, 2 years on, I got a job which involved exercising with the elderly...I hadn't realised at this point that the only movements I could make at all were 'one foot in front of the other' and pushing pedals in the car (which still causes problems with pain in the thigh in slow moving traffic)! However, with much perseverance, I got it - spent a lot of time laughing at myself for my pathetic attempts to do a 'step to the side', but you've got to have a sense of humour!
I have no sensation of hot and cold or touch in the majority of my left leg or foot, but it's also often quite painful...I imagine a lot of you know what I mean. Saddle has very limited feeling on the right and nothing on the left. My bladder was badly damaged because I was finally taken seriously when it was holding 2litres of urine and I couldn't pee! I now use ISC due to retention causing recurrent bladder infections and I've started using the Peristeen system for bowel issues, which doesn't resolve everything, but makes it all much more bearable! Wind is a problem I believe there is no answer to (I, personally, think this the one thing I would fix if I had ONE wish...everything else can be managed or adaptations made, this is just embarrassing!).
I can't dance (but I never could anyway), I can't ride a pushbike or a horse any more and I can't dig the garden (either standing or bending over a bed with a trowel) and many other things are difficult, but most are not impossible if you're determined and willing to adapt! I had a baby 3 years ago, which was a bit of a risk, but I wore a back brace throughout the pergnancy and suffered very little all things considered! I'm now learning to ride a motorbike...not easy due to the lack of feeling, but I refuse to be beaten, no matter how long it takes!
The best advice I can give is to have a positive mental attitude, make the most of what you've got and don't dwell on the things you haven't...not a day goes by that I'm not grateful that I can walk (regardless of its limitations and frequently bizarre fashion), that I'm not in horrendous pain any more and, ultimately, that I'm alive and able to spend time with my family and friends...it could all have been so different!
#19
Posted 21 August 2011 - 11:09 AM
I related, also, to your comments about repetition. I've found that to be the most helpful tool. Doing things over and over until they feel 'normal' is the key. I'm working hard on a treadmill now, practicing walking motion over and over. I also do sidesteps and backwards walking for the same reason.
It's nice to know of your progress and the things you've been accomplishing in life. This sure isn't an easy road but with determination and a good attitude, the best can be made of it.
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