Brief Answer:
Prognosis differs from indivially.
Detailed Answer:
Hi,
Thanks for your query my friend.
I want to explain you the whole scenario, so that you may know what is happening in your spine.
First of I want to let you know the difference between
cervical myelopathy and
Cervical radiculopathy.
Cervical myelopathy refers to a loss of function in the upper and lower extremities secondary to compression of the
spinal cord within the neck.
Cervical radiculopathy refers to a loss of function in a specific region within the upper extremity secondary to irritation and / or compression of a
spinal nerve root in the neck.
Initially the compression is intermittent and the cord continues to recover between cycles of compression. Later on, as the pressure becomes more intense and longer lasting, the insult caused by the repeated episodes of ischemia results in permanent tissue damage. This damage may not recover well or, at times, not at all, even after surgical relief of the compression.
As we age, the spine may develop degenerative changes in the joints that can create tightening of the
spinal canal. Over time this process may lead to pinching the spinal cord and compromise of coordination of the extremities.
Cervical stenosis is a slowly progressive condition that pinches the spinal cord in the neck. Cervical myelopathy refers to this compression of the cervical spinal cord as a result of spinal stenosis.
Cervical spinal stenosis with myelopathy is more common in elderly patients.
So I want to say that for the proper diagnosis to be made you have to consult orthopedic surgeon who will ask you a series of questions and a physical examination that is directed primarily at your neck, and nerve function in your arms and legs. He will check your balance, test your gait. He may advise you Somatosensory Evoked Potentials (SSEP), an electrical study.
In future you must be concerned about myelopathy only, if you have following complaints-
-Heavy feeling in the legs
-
-Inability to walk at a brisk pace
-Deterioration in fine motor skills (such as handwriting or buttoning a shirt)
-Intermittent shooting pains into the arms and legs (like an electrical shock), especially when bending their head forward (known as Lermitte’s phenomenon)
-Arm pain (cervical radiculopathy).
You must know that often with cervical stenosis symptoms, it is the arm pain that prompts someone with this condition to seek medical treatment. At this point, the cervical stenosis with myelopathy is then discovered through medical history and physical exam.
Research shows that, in patients who have had symptoms for a slightly longer period of time, the prognosis is less clear. Some patients will go onto complete resolution of pain with (and, in some cases, without) limited treatment such as modification of activities, heat, ice,
physical therapy or over-the-counter medications. Approximately one third of these patients will have some lingering degree of symptoms that they may be able to cope with. A small percentage will have symptoms that are unbearable and may need further treatment.
From my experience and clinical researches it has been proved that the “natural history” of clinically obvious cervical myelopathy is somewhat more guarded. The consensus is that patients with myelopathy will have progression of symptoms. What is not known is when the symptoms will progress, how much they will progress or how rapidly they will progress. Approximately 75% of patients will have stepwise deterioration in their function with stable periods in between the episodes of deterioration. Twenty percent will have slow steady deterioration and another 5% will have rapid deterioration.
It is good that you have not symptoms develop till now, although you have compression of the cord at C-4-C-5 with an accompanying abnormal cord signal. Both of these findings were confirmed by an MRI on a 1.5 Tesla machine on 2/17/2014.
Your physical therapist has rightly explains that even though your radiculopathy is improving it does not mean that the pressure on my cord at C4-C-5 is improving. So you must be careful in future ans must have regular follow up with your doctor and try to avoid activities which demand heavy work as explained previously.
At-last I would like to say that every patient is individual patient i.e so it is not possible to say in advance what percentage of patients who have MRI's findings that indicate pressure on the cord with an abnormal cord signal NEVER develop myelopathy.
I hope it helps.
Thanks.
Dr.Singh.