What is spondylosis without myelopathy or radiculopathy

Overview

Cervical spondylosis affects one or more of the first seven vertebrae (and related parts) of the spine.

What is cervical spondylosis?

Cervical spondylosis is a general term for age-related wear and tear in the cervical spine (neck) that can lead to neck pain, neck stiffness and other symptoms. Sometimes this condition is called arthritis or osteoarthritis of the neck.

What are the parts of the cervical spine?

Your entire spine is made up of 24 vertebrae (bones of the spine). The cervical spine consists of seven vertebrae that begin at the base of the skull. Running through an opening of the entire vertebral column are the spinal cord and its nerves. The spinal cord and nerves carry messages between the brain and rest of body, including muscles and organs. Between each vertebrae are disks. The disks act like the body’s shock absorbers. The disks are made of flexible but strong connective tissue filled with a gel-like material. Disks are like “jelly-filled, cushy doughnuts” between each vertebrae.

There are three joints between each pair of vertebrae. The front joint is called the intervertebral disk. Two joints in the back of the spine are called facet joints. Within every joint is cartilage, which cushions the ends of bones. Ligaments are soft bands of tissue that connect the vertebrae together.

Spondylosis is the natural wearing down of these parts of the spine. Cartilage wears out over time, disks lose their volume and become dried and cracked, ligaments may thicken and bone spurs may form where bones rub against each other in areas that are no longer covered with cartilage. All of these changes are defined as spondylosis.

How common is cervical spondylosis?

Changes in your spine are considered a normal part of aging. The spine likely begins this wearing-down process sometime in your 30s. By age 60, almost nine in 10 people have cervical spondylosis.

Who is most at risk for getting cervical spondylosis?

Older age is a risk factor for cervical spondylosis. In addition to age, you are more likely to experience neck pain or other symptoms related to cervical spondylosis if you:

  • Smoke cigarettes or used to.
  • Have one or more family members with this condition.
  • Strain your neck often for your job, like looking overhead (for example, painters) or downward (plumbers or flooring installers) for many hours every day or keeping your head at an improper position for long periods of time (for example, staring at a computer screen that is too high or low).
  • Have a previous neck injury, such as from a car accident.
  • Do heavy lifting like construction workers.
  • Are exposed to a lot of vibration like bus or truck drivers.

Symptoms and Causes

Disk herniation is one of the common causes of cervical spondylosis.

What causes cervical spondylosis?

As you get older, your spine undergoes changes due to decades of normal wear and tear. Starting in middle age, the disks between your vertebrae start to change. These changes can include:

  • Degeneration: The spinal disks in your neck may slowly wear down (degenerate). With time, the disks become thinner, and the soft tissue has less elasticity. If you or your parents measure in a little shorter in height than you did years ago, this is normal collapsing or settling of your disks.
  • Herniation: Normal aging can cause part of your spinal disk to tear or crack. This is called a herniated disk. The herniation can allow the disk to bulge out, pressing on nearby tissue or a spinal nerve. This pressure can cause pain, tingling or numbness.
  • Osteoarthritis: Osteoarthritis is a progressive (ongoing) condition that causes cartilage in your joints to degenerate (wear down with time). With osteoarthritis, cartilage degenerates faster than with normal aging.
  • Bone spurs: When cartilage in the joints of the vertebrae in your spine starts to degenerate and bone tissue rubs directly against other bone tissue, abnormal bone growths develop along the edges of vertebrae. These growths (called osteophytes or bone spurs) are common as you age. Often, they cause no symptoms.

What are the most common cervical spondylosis symptoms?

You may have cervical spondylosis and not even know it. It’s common to have no symptoms related to this condition.

If you do experience symptoms, symptoms typically include:

  • Neck pain or stiffness. This may be the main symptom. Pain may get worse when you move your neck.
  • A nagging soreness in the neck.
  • Muscle spasms.
  • A clicking, popping or grinding sound when you move your neck.
  • Dizziness.
  • Headaches.

What is cervical myelopathy?

As your vertebral disks wear away with time, your spinal cord can be put under increased pressure as the canal gets narrower from arthritis and disk protrusions. This compression can result in worsening neck pain and other symptoms. This condition is called cervical spondylotic myelopathy (CSM).

If you have CSM, you have the symptoms seen with cervical spondylosis, plus these additional symptoms:

  • Weakness, tingling or numbness in one or both arms or legs.
  • Loss of bladder and bowel control.
  • Trouble walking (feeling unsteady on your feet).
  • Loss of function in hands, like having problems writing.

Symptoms related to CSM may slowly get worse over time. If your symptoms don’t go away, or if they significantly affect your life, your healthcare provider may refer you to a spine surgeon who specializes in treating this condition.

Diagnosis and Tests

How do healthcare providers diagnose cervical spondylosis?

Your healthcare provider will perform a physical exam to find the cause of your neck pain or other symptoms.

Your symptoms and their severity give clues to how much pressure your cervical spine might be under. During a physical exam, your healthcare provider may check your:

  • Neck flexibility.
  • Muscle strength and reflexes in your hands, arms or legs.
  • Reflexes.
  • Gait (how you walk).
  • Neck and shoulder, looking for trigger points (a small bump or knot in the muscle of your neck or shoulder that may be the source of your pain and tenderness).

Sometimes, healthcare providers can diagnose cervical spondylosis with just a physical exam. Other times, they may order tests to learn more about what may be causing your symptoms. These tests may include the following:

  • X-rays show the bones in your neck, their alignment, loss of bone and bone spurs (if present). Not all bone changes cause symptoms. Healthcare providers may use X-rays as a starting point. X-rays or other tests can also help rule out other causes of your discomfort, such as a spine tumor.
  • Computed tomography (CT) scans provide more detail than X-rays. This scan can help better view the spinal canal and bone spurs.
  • MRI images show the details of soft tissues such as cartilage, nerve roots, muscles, spinal cord and disks. This test can show spinal compression or herniated disk more clearly than X-rays.electromyelography An MRI can help identify the source and location of pain.
  • Other tests may include a myelogram(type of CT scan) or electromyogram (nerve function test). These tests provide more details on how cervical spondylosis may be affecting your nerves.

Management and Treatment

What are common cervical spondylosis treatments?

Cervical spondylosis does not always cause symptoms. Without symptoms, you may not need treatment at all.

When your condition does cause symptoms, conservative treatments effectively treat most cases. Your healthcare provider may recommend:

  • Physical therapy: Your symptoms may be relieved with specific exercises and stretches. Physical therapy focuses on stretching and strengthening your muscles and improving your posture. You may do these stretches at home or need the assistance of a physical therapist at a clinic. Your healthcare provider will advise how long and how often you should practice these exercises, based on your individual symptoms and condition.
  • Ice, heat and massage can help relieve your symptoms. You’ll have to conduct your own trial to see if heat or cold best relieve your pain and discomfort. Apply heat or ice typically no more than 20 minutes at a time, several times a day. Massage is another option that may be tried in some patients. Ask your healthcare provide if this is a reasonable option for what’s causing your specific problem.
  • Oral medications: Depending on how much pain you’re in, a healthcare provider might recommend prescription or over-the-counter anti-inflammatory drugs like ibuprofen (Advil®, Motrin®) or naproxen sodium (Aleve®). Muscle relaxants such as cyclobenzaprine (Amrix®, Fexmid®) can treat muscle spasms. For severe arm pain from nerve impingement, gabapentin (Neurontin®) may reduce the pain.
  • Soft collar or brace: Your healthcare provider may recommend you wear a therapeutic collar for a short time. This can limit neck movement and help strained muscles rest and recuperate. Wearing a brace for too long can lead to muscle atrophy (wasting away). Only use a collar under the guidance of a medical professional.
  • Injection therapy: Steroids can be injected into the affected area of the spine. Injection medications can make your symptoms better for a short period of time. There are three common steroid injection procedures:
    • Cervical epidural block: Neck or arm pain due to cervical disk herniation can be treated with an injection of a combination of a steroid and anesthetic. The injection is made into the epidural space, which is the space next to the covering of the spinal cord.
    • Cervical facet joint block: This steroid plus anesthetic injection is made into small joints at the affected segments of the cervical spine.
    • Media branch block and radiofrequency ablation: This technique is used to both diagnosis and treat chronic neck pain. If pain is relieved with an injection of an anesthetic, that spot is identified for treatment. The treatment, called radiofrequency ablation, involves damaging the nerves with sound waves that are causing pain in the joint.

For the most severe cases of cervical spondylosis – including cervical myelopathy or cervical radiculopathy – your healthcare providers may consider surgery. Surgeries can involve removing bone spurs and fusing together the vertebrae or creating more room for the spinal cord by removing a portion of vertebrae.

Spine surgery is complex and may involve a lengthy recovery. Your healthcare provider will consider your symptoms, condition and overall health before deciding whether surgery may benefit you.

Prevention

Are there ways to prevent cervical spondylosis from occurring?

There is no way to prevent cervical spondylosis as this condition is a normal, age-related deterioration (“wear and tear”) of the joint space and disks in your neck.

If you do have a job or a hobby that results in a lot of time spent looking overhead, downward or having your head in an awkward posture, take many short breaks in your day (if possible). Learn proper stretching and strengthening exercises from your healthcare provider or physical therapist.

Follow other self-help therapies such as applying ice or heat to your neck to ease muscle soreness and pain and taking over-the-counter anti-inflammatory drugs and pain-killers such as ibuprofen or naproxen.

Always follow the instructions of your healthcare professionals and physical therapist.

Outlook / Prognosis

What can I expect if I think I have (or have a diagnosis of) cervical spondylosis?

At first, you may not even have any symptoms. However, since cervical spondylosis is an age-related degenerative condition, if you are in your 60s, 70s, 80s or older you may have such symptoms as neck pain and stiffness to start. If you are young, you can still develop this condition if you have jobs or hobbies that cause your head and neck to be out of good alignment for long periods of time. Fortunately, most early symptoms of pain and discomfort can be treated with simple at-home and over-the-counter remedies.

Some people may go on to develop more complicated issues such as disk herniation, bone spurs, pinched nerves and nerve compression. These conditions may require an increasing amount of medical care, ranging range prescription medications, to steroid injections to surgery.

When should I call the healthcare provider?

Most cases of neck pain go away on their own or with nonsurgical treatments. If neck pain or discomfort lasts more than a few days, reach out to your healthcare provider for guidance.

Seek immediate medical care if you have:

  • Severe pain or pain that is worsening.
  • Numbness or tingling in arms.
  • Trouble with coordination, trouble walking.
  • Muscle weakness or heaviness in arms or legs.
  • Loss of bladder or bowel control.

Living With

What the difference between cervical spondylosis and spondylitis, spondylolysis and spondylolisthesis?

Cervical spondylosis is a degeneration – or breakdown – of the spine and disks in your neck. It is a general term for the situation that occurs in your neck area. It is an arthritis of the joints (the spaces) between the vertebrae in the neck.

Spondylitis is inflammation of one or more vertebrae. “Itis” means inflammation. Ankylosing spondylitis is a type of arthritis in your spine. Ankylosing spondylitis can result in vertebrae fusing together.

Spondylolysis is a physical break in the mid-arch area of a section of vertebrae called the pars interarticularis. The pars interarticularis are the horizontal pieces on the sides of the main body of each vertebrae – the “wings” on the body of each vertebrae. This condition is usually caused by injury, trauma or overuse by hyperextension (for example, weight lifters, tennis players). Spondylolysis usually occurs in the lumber (lower back) spine.

Cervical spondylolisthesis is a specific condition in which one vertebra slips forward over the vertebrae beneath it. A fracture (break) or injury of the vertebrae of the spine can cause the vertebra to start to shift out of place.

What is radiculopathy?

Radiculopathy is a pinching of a nerve at the nerve root. The nerve root is the first segment of nerve as it branches off of the spinal cord within the spinal column.

What causes spondylosis without myelopathy or radiculopathy lumbar region?

The exact cause of lumbar spondylosis is unknown. Because it affects synovial joints, lumbar spondylosis can be thought of as being analogous to peripheral osteoarthritis (OA), and likely results from an imbalance in the synthesis and degeneration of the articular cartilage.

Is spondylosis without myelopathy painful?

Spondylosis is common, but it is usually not serious. Many who have it experience no pain, though it can be painful for some. Most patients with spinal osteoarthritis will not need surgery.

What is spondylosis with myelopathy or radiculopathy?

Spondylosis refers to degenerative, or age-related, changes in the spine. These changes include disc degeneration, bone spurs, and thickened ligaments. Cervical spondylotic myelopathy, therefore, is myelopathy (spinal cord damage) caused by spondylosis (degeneration) in the cervical spine (neck).

What is the main cause of spondylosis?

Spondylosis is caused by chronic wear on the spine. This includes the disks or cushions between the neck vertebrae and the joints between the bones of the cervical spine. Over time these changes can press down on (compress) one or more of the nerve roots. In advanced cases, the spinal cord becomes involved.

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