Please email the doctor if you have further questions… this article is in NO WAY a substitute for an evaluation and diagnosis by an actual doctor. The opinions expressed here are strictly those of Dr. Peter Carr, a Kenmore, Washington chiropractor.
So… you found this page after being directed here from the Internet, or by an MRI that you wanted help reading. The purpose of this page is to:
- give rational explanations of what the disc is,
- how it works, how it becomes damaged,
- what reports from radiologists say, and
- what that actually means to the patient the images were taken of.
Finally, I’d like to talk about conservative treatment of the disc, and traditional allopathic (M.D.) solutions.
The structure of the cervical disc
The cervical disc is actually a ligament that holds the neck bones, called vertebrae, together. Because it also acts as a pad, separating the bones, it is exposed to some pretty disparate forces… it’s a lot like asking a coil of rope to work as a cushion, or a cushion to work as a rope. It has to support the weight of the head and all of the structures above it, and still allow for lots of motions in all directions that we make with our necks.
The cervical disc, when looked at from the top, looks somewhat heart-shaped. In the middle of the “heart” is a goopier substance called the nucleus pulposis, which in Latin means pulpy center. This nucleus helps disperse loads from above, and it does that by being held in place by layers, or rings of ligament called the annular rings. Each layer or ring has a diagonal arrangement that is opposite to the one above and below it, forming this really cool cross-matrixing net that normally holds the nucleus in the center.
Trauma, both microtrauma (posture/ running/ heavy vibration/ roller coasters/ pillows etc) and macrotrauma (car accidents/ football hits/ boxing/ falls) can tear the fibers of disc, allowing the more goopy nucleus to bow out that area. These bulges can go in any direction: forward, backward, sides, or any combination of those.
It is when the disc bulges backward that the real problems start to occur, and this is due to the anatomy involved: Right behind the disc is a vertical thin ligament called the ligamentum flavum (yellow ligament, but always said “flavorful” as a sick joke in anatomy labs) that lines the tube formed by the vertebrae, where the spinal cord runs vertically. The spinal cord is surrounded by fluid, called cerebrospinal fluid, that nourishes and protects the spinal cord, and the branches from it, called the spinal nerve roots, which exit the spinal column and transmit and receive all the strength and energy to and from our bodies.
A good analogy is to think of the spinal cord is like a really thick noodle, surrounded by a sac. Better, think of a thick noodle in water, in a Ziplock bag. IF your disc pushes hard enough, it will deform the bag (THECAL SAC), which COULD affect the nervous system. If it pushes on the noodle (CORD), it WILL affect the nervous system at that level, and what that nerve influences in your body.
So to refresh:The spinal cord drops out of your head and goes through the tunnel formed by the bones of your neck. Between each bone another hole is formed, called the IVF (intervertebral foramen) and a spinal nerve root peels away from the spinal cord and goes through that hole. The back part of the hole is called the lateral recess. If the disc closes down that opening, that is termed stenosis.
Like all ligaments, the discs have no real blood supply after our teen years, and therefore have very little ability heal themselves. They do suck up water while we sleep, and slowly crush it away during the day, a hydraulic event called imbibition. This is why we are shorter at the end of the day, and typically why people with disc injuries feel them more in the morning.
This seems like a good time to talk about symptoms, things that you feel or notice… when there is direct pressure on a nerve, either because of bone, disc, fat, or tumor, the nerve responds in one of two ways: it outputs too much information (pain, shooting pain, a deep gripping feeling) or too little (pins & needles / numbness / weakness / paralysis). These areas of innervation are called dermatomes. Doctors use the loss of motor function as the dividing line between treatment and referral for surgery. Weakness, paralysis, or atrophy (the loss of muscle) are not good signs for recovery. It’s taken me about four of five hours to put this information together for you, and will continue to add to it as I get the chance.
The rest of this information should be helpful when reading MRI reports
Always take the time to go through each word in the report.
And remember, there is no “good” or “bad”…it is what it is.
PHYSICAL STRUCTURES:
– Annular fibers/ annulus- Rings of ligaments that help to hold the nucleus pulposis in the center of the disc.
– Interspace- The height between vertebrae, an indication of relative disc health.
– Disc- A ligament that connects vertebrae together and keep them from coming apart.
– Ligamentum flavum- a long, thin ligament on the back side of the vertebral bodies, just in front of the thecal sac.
– Lateral canal- the back end of the hallway through which the nerve exits the spine.
– Endplate- the top and bottom margins of the vertebral body, like the top and bottom of a can-shaped structure.
– Facet- The hinges of the spine, one on each side.
– Nucleus Pulposis- a “superball”-consistency center of a spinal disc which helps to disperse force.
– Osteophyte- Deposition of bone around another structure.
– Spurs/spurring- a sharp point of bones coming from a spinal structure
– Foramen/ foraminal- Any hole in a bone. When relating to the spine, it the IVF, or intervertebral foramen, a hallway formed by the vertebra above and below. This is where the spinal nerve root exits the spine.
– Spondyl- means “vertebra-related”.
– Marrow signal- The return on MRI of the tissue that makes blood inside the vertebrae.
– Uncovertebral Osteophytes: The uncovertebral joints, also known as the joints of Luschka, are like small saddles in your neck bones that help stabilize them. Osteophytes, as discussed above, are enlargements of that bone. It usually is referred to as arthritis of the disc, but that’s not accurate. It means that the bone is growing to stabilize your neck.
– Thecal sac- the membrane filled with cerebrospinal fluid that contains the spinal cord.
IMAGES:
T1/ T2- Ways to look at the information for MRI studies. In general, the MRI spins up all the hydrogen ions in the body, aligning their spins to one single plane. When released, the hydrogen returns to its old plane, releasing measurable energy. T2 images show large amounts of hydrogen in white, showing tissues such as fat, and water.
DIRECTIONS/ RELATIONS:
– Anterior- to the front
– Posterior- to the back
– Superior- toward the head
– Inferior- toward the feet
– Distal- away from the centerline
– Proximal- toward the centerline
– Central- Goes directly posterior
– Paracentral- usually right or left… of center
– Retrolisthesis- a backward slippage
– Anterolisthesis- a forward slippage
– Extension – arching backward, looking up to the ceiling
– Flexion- bending forward toward the floor
– Lateral Flexion- sideways bending
– Lordosis- a forward facing banana curve of the vertebra, normal in the neck and low back
– Dermatome- an area of skin innervated mostly by one nerve. Help to diagnose levels of injury.
– Hypertrophy- an enlargement or thickening of
– Stenosis- closing down of a hole or holes (foramen)
– Bilateral- both sided
– Radicular/-radiculo- follows a classic pattern of nerves
CONDITION SEVERITY:
– Tiny- really, pretty small
– Mild – small
– Moderate- medium
– Severe- Large
– Marked- WOW!
– lysis – a breakage
– osis – a long-term inflammation of
– listhesis – a slippage
– pathy – there’s something wrong with whatever prefix came first
TYPES OF DISC INJURIES
– Protrusion- a direct bulging of the disc
– Bulge- a diffuse bulging of the disc
– Herniation- a frank and focal outpouring of the nucleus pulposis
– Extrusion- ?
– Sequestered- a piece of the disc is floating free in the cerebrospinal fluid.
INDICATIONS THAT THINGS ARE HAPPENING:
– Encroachment- something is closing in on something else
ligamentous laxity- indicates a sprain, where the bones move too much on one another.
– effusion- swelling, usually in response to inflammation
– disc height- the distance between two vertebra, a good indication of disc health
– disc desiccation- the amount of water contained in the disc structure
– anterior osteophytes- a bony sign of degenerative disc disease, or a decay of the discs in your neck.
– When reading reports, there are the FINDINGS and IMPRESSIONS. USUALLY: the impressions section is numbered or “ranked” in order of severity.