Radiculopathy: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 03:04, 23 March 2023
Clinic
- Radiculopathy, also commonly referred to as pinched nerve, refers to a set of conditions in which one or more nerves are affected and do not work properly (a neuropathy).
- It is a Peripheral Nervous system disease
- It can result in Radicular pain, Weakness, Paresthesia or difficulty controlling specific muscles.
- Radicular pain that results from a radiculopathy should not be confused with referred pain, which is different both in mechanism and clinical features.
Causes
- Mechanical compression of a nerve root: Degenerative disc disease, Osteoarthritis, Facet joint degeneration/hypertrophy, Ligamentous hypertrophy, Spondylolisthesis, Neoplastic disease, Epidural abscess, Spinal epidural hematoma, Proximal diabetic neuropathy, Tarlov cysts, Sarcoidosis, Arachnoiditis, Tethered spinal cord syndrome
- Neuritis such as
- Transverse myelitis
- Sacral Radiculopathy
Infections such as
- VZV
- HIV
- Lyme disease
Sign / Symptoms
- Pain
- Numbness / Paresthesia,
- Weakness
- Deep tendon reflexes (Stretch reflex) may be diminished or absent
Types
- Cervical radiculopathy: Brachial plexus neuropathy (C6 and C7 nerves) affected most frequently.
- Lumbosacral radiculopathy / Sciatica
- Cauda equina syndrome should be investigated in case of saddle anesthesia, loss of bladder or bowel control, or leg weakness.
- Polyradiculopathy refers to the condition where more than one spinal nerve root is affected.
Entities / Miasms
- General, Polyneuritis: CMV
- Polyradiculitis: ORBV
- Ascending Polyradiculitis: MMP
- Back, Radiculopathy, Sacral: HSV-1, HSV-2
- Ext, Neuritis, Brachial: CMV, CXA, CXB, EBV, B19, COV-19, VZV, WNE
- Reflexes, Hypo reflexia: EEE/ WEE, GSS, HCV, HSV-1, PLV, SAHF
Note
Here we have a big conflict, that should be explained more. Radiculopathy would be a post-node according to TLT theory since it is caused by mechanical pressure of a tumor or an abscess on nerve roots. Although we do not find a mechanical pressure in a significant number of patients. Also we find psychological modalities in common radiculopathic cases known as Sciatica, which means dynamic inflammation. That's why I prefer to divide Sciatica into Dynamic and Static cases. Static cases mostly need Agar, Arn and Hyper, depending on the form of their pain. In Dynamic cases I search for dynamic inflammation which have the above mentioned entities, which suggest HSV-1