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The mysterious spine journey of BEN SIMMONS! Nerve pain after microdiscectomy for disc herniation. 

TheAthleteSpine
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Brooklyn Nets’ Ben Simmons was recently ruled out indefinitely with ongoing leg pain from a lingering “back injury.” Simmons has a long history of back issues, although it’s not known if this new issue is in any way related to previous problems. Lumbar spine problems have ended the last two seasons early for Simmons, who underwent a microdiscectomy back in 2022. However, has continued to struggle with bouts of leg pain/symptoms related to ongoing nerve compression in his lumbar spine.
On this episode of TheAthleteSpine, we dive into the mysterious spine journey of Ben Simmons. Most notably, although the media has continued to blow up this story each time he sits out - what Ben is experiences, is certainly not uncommon in our world.
We take some time to describe how a disc herniation causes leg pain, numbness, tingling, and potentially weakness. Although pain is the most common presentation, weakness is usually the greatest concern and what brings athletes (and all individuals) to our offices. There are many ways to quickly check the strength of various muscles in the legs that are innervated by some of the nerves that may be compressed in the lumbar spine. We demonstrate some of our most common exam maneuvers that we can quickly perform in the office as well as tests that everyone can perform at home!
Ongoing symptoms in the leg(s) after a microdiscectomy procedure (see our video clip) can be multifactorial. Some common causes could be: ongoing nerve compression after surgery, the formation of scar tissue, re-herniation at the same level as a prior disc herniation (or at a different level) or instability that of the spine at the level of the prior surgery. Enjoy!
#BenSimmons #nba #discectomy #microdiscectomy #spinesurgery #discherniation #basketball #BrooklynNets #lumbarspine

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29 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 2   
@davidyoung1570
@davidyoung1570 4 месяца назад
This is great content guys. Thank you! You listed various reasons for continued nerve pain after spine surgery. How often would you say the reason for continued nerve pain is due to the nerve simply not healing vs. nerve not being adequately decompressed or recurrent disc herniation? In other words, would you say it’s more common to find a reason the nerve isn’t healing or is it more common that the nerve simply doesn’t heal back?
@TheAthleteSpine
@TheAthleteSpine 4 месяца назад
Thats a really good question, and I'm not sure I have a great answer to that. I think the situations are all so variable in this case. Yes -- there can certainly be ongoing nerve compression from incomplete decompression or recurrent stenosis from a recurrent herniated disc or even some scar tissue forming. From a nerve healing perspective, the severity and duration of compression can likely impact the ability to "heal" once the decompression has been performed. We ultimately do not understand nerve healing all that well. There is some evidence to show that these nerve roots often have the capacity to heal for about 12 months after surgery. So, where you are 12 months from surgery is likely where you will be as a "new normal." But, that is just an average. Hope that helps!
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