Monday 31 March 2008

Spinal Cord Injury Recovery - Update

Recovery From Spinal Cord Injury
(A Mixed Blessing???)
(Living with Nerve Pain)

Summery: Movement improvement ~90% but with greatly increased nerve pain but lessening spasms. (some of this post is redundant from previous posts)

When in October of 2006, some 4 months post surgery, I started to notice the first signs of movement in my legs, I never realized what a painful and emotional experience the recovery process would be. In the end of January of 2007 the next real physical change occurred when I noticed some strength and movement in my trunk. I feel that at this point in time the inflammation began to recede which then allowed more signals to travel up and down my damaged spinal cord. This was a mixed blessing. The steadily increasing strength and mobility was of course welcomed but the flip side of the recovery coin was that sensation/pain signals also began to flow producing discomfort to the point of being unbearable on many days.

I can now move but live in continuous pain and discomfort. Will the discomfort ever ease or am I destined to go crazy from the never ending intense pain?

Medication to control pain is either ineffective or if it has some effect, perhaps if I were to go off of it I would truly be in excruciating and unbearable pain.

During my time in the hospital and rehab, I had no pain associated with my injury. Regardless, I was placed on the nerve pain medication Gabapentin. It was only 3 months after discharge that I began to feel a tingling sensation in my legs. That tingling sensation soon developed into a burning sensation which could vary day to day. My sensation is best described as varying from what would, on better days, feel as a tingle or having my legs immersed in club soda water. On bad days they burn intensely as if my legs were immersed in boiling water. The sensation/pain could be from the ankles and below or more likely extend to the knee caps. The later is more likely. I haven't been able to make any associations or conclusions regarding this nerve pain. There seems to be no correlation between intensity and exercise, weather, diet, fatigue, position, room temperature etc. The only correlation that seems to occur is the the burning increases at night.

Nerve pain differs from conventional pain which we all have experienced. This truly is a searing, burning pain which may tingle. At it's worst, it is so distracting that it is difficult to concentrate on anything other than the pain making it all but impossible to even watch TV without constantly being distracted.
Nerve pain also differs from conventional pain as conventional analgesics (pain relievers) such as acetylsalicylic acid (Aspirin), ibuprofen (Advil), acetaminophen (Tylenol) etc have no effect. To my knowledge there are only some 4 drugs in general use which may be effective against nerve pain. They are:
  • Gabapentin
  • Nortriptilene
  • Amitryptiline
  • Pregablin (Lyrica)
I am currently on Gabapentin & Nortriptyline yet the pain can border on unbearable at the worst of times and distracting at the best.

My doctor wrote a script to add Amitryptiline to my other nerve pain medications but the pharmacy informed me of what I suspected. Amitryptiline and Nortryptiline are closely related analogues of each other with similar actions and it wouldn't be rational to prescribe both concurrently. My pharmacist was going to discuss this issue with my doctor and get back to me by phone before filling the prescription. No phone call came and I didn't pursue the matter.

So now that I've regained much of the mobility I had hoped for, on most days I live in continuous excruciating pain. In all the reading I have done, there seems to be no remedy for this condition.

A Summery of Spinal Cord Injury Recovery
(From Injury to March 2008)

March 2008 -
Having been paralyzed from the chest down (T-5) I have recovered motion, almost to the point of being normal in action and strength right down to my ankles. I am able to flex my foot up and down at the ankles but not side to side at the ankles. Lower abdominal muscles are active but very weak which I believe can be strengthened and recovered with proper sustained exercises over time. Tactile (touch) & temperature sensations extend right to the toes but are lessened and altered the further down I go. Below the ankles I can sense temperature changes but it takes a second or two to register and touch/pressure does not feel normal but rather like a tingling sensation.
Spasms which previously plagued me for hours on end have diminished and now occur sporadically, usually for short periods of time, more often at night and are not usually as intense as they once were. They still are present and like the nerve pain, I cannot link them to any trigger such as exercise etc.
I am currently walking with braces and a walker for about 120 meters (360 feet) at one time, up to three times a week. Although wobbly, I can stand without braces at my kitchen sink and put away dishes in the upper cabinets.

Tightness - Muscles, tendons and ligaments that have been active and at a certain length in daily functionality over my lifetime have shortened and contracted during post injury bed confinement. In spite of trunk & chest muscles becoming active, even after one year I feel as if I have a large elastic band wrapped around my core. I can breath normally but if I cough it feels as if my diaphragm doesn't give and there is pain with each cough. On standing, my legs have to stretch out as the muscles want to contract and not stay at their functional length. I can feel individual muscle bundles or sheaths in my calves slide against each other when standing. They stretch out over a day of exercising but once again contract overnight. A very unsettling feeling. How long before the muscles remain at a functional length??
Adhesions - When twisting, stretching or moving, particularly with the chest and trunk I often get the sensation of tearing flesh. I believe adhesions that have formed over the year where I was unable to move. In my mind, adhesions occur when muscles or layers of tissues which normally slide past each other now have formed bonds or bridges between layers. They no longer slide but tug, tear or ratchet past each other. Layers of tissue do not want to separate and when stretched, the bonds tear. This gives a momentary painful tearing sensation but doesn't last. Hopefully over time the tears become less frequent, the bonds are broken and the movement of tissue layers slide smoothly across each other. I have had massage therapy in hopes of speeding this process but am unconvinced that it actually helps and my private insurance offers limited funds for massage therapy. Funds have been all but used up in about 5 sessions. I see no point in continuing at this point and intense contortions and stretching are probably as effective.


January 2008- Started to "walk" with the braces for the first time in about late January. Firstly up and down the parallel bars and then in late February walking in the hospital hallway with a walker and the close supervision of my physiotherapist.
The design of the leg braces could have used some improvement as the locking knee hinge mechanism doesn't work smoothly, the lever comes apart and during the walking process, the left and right leg hinge mechanisms can latch onto one another and lock preventing me from taking another step. I have to teeter around on the braces and walker trying to unhitch one leg from the other which may lead to my physiotherapist having a heart attack! I came up with my own modification which I'm still evaluating but it seems to have reduced if not eliminated the locking problem.

From January to March I progressed from having to have two physios haul me up out of my wheelchair to the parallel bars and assist me in moving one foot out and back, to my walking virtually unassisted for 120m down a hallway. Proprioception remains a problem as I cannot tell where my feet are without looking at them. This propagates bad posture as my butt sticks out as I look down changing my center of gravity. Still working at that.
Being in bed or chair-bound for so long, I find it difficult to push my hips forward over my leg and recover the proper center of gravity necessary for walking. I can push my butt and hips forward to where they should be but find it difficult to hold them there. Hoping this will loosen up over time as it took time for them to seize up.

September 2007- First fitted for the braces and continued to strengthen with bench exercises and with the 'Sit-To-Stand' or 'Standing Frame' apparatus in order to recover balance and strengthen leg muscles.
Up to September of 2007 I could transfer myself from my wheelchair to my bed unassisted and lie down but not much else. With great effort I found that I could flip over on my stomach by bridging with my feet and back and scooting my butt sideways to the edge of the bed. At first I would haul myself over on my side, then stomach using a rope tied to the bed frame as my bed doesn't have any side rails. Running shoes or 'water socks' (slip on canvas shoes with a tacky rubber bottom often used in water sports) provide grip and make turning easier. At first I would sleep with the shoes on in order to flip at night. I soon found that this was no longer necessary and that I could push off with the heel of one foot and roll over around my other extended leg. I attribute the absence of skin related problems to my ability move around in bed. Pressure sores and infections have never been a problem with me.
I now flip around in bed back to stomach, side to side, end to end and sit up with relative ease.
Spasms seemed to lessen at the end of August of 2007.

January 2007 - became aware of trunk muscles recovering. Could lean forward and sit up rather than falling over like a rag doll. Started physiotherapy 4 times a week at local hospital. With the increasing motion a rather intense nerve pain in the legs developed. Spasms continued - quite severe at times.

April 2006 to December of 2006 - When I awoke one morning and realized I couldn't move my legs, I had no pain or discomfort whatsoever. Pain was first felt as the result of major surgery which was treated morphine but resulted in intense and disturbing hallucinations. While in initial recovery I noticed that occasionally my right leg would occasionally jump. This curiosity was to be my first experience with paralytic spasms. At the Rehab hospital spasms increased tremendously even after being placed on the maximum dosage of the anti-spasmodic drug Baclafin. Valium was added in order to assist the Baclafin action but it just made me a drowsy 'spaz'. Botulinum toxin was suggested as a therapy - full paralysis to ease the spasms. I declined.
On waking each morning I tried not to move as I discovered that soon after starting to move my upper body the spasms would start. At the Rehab hospital spasms would start in the morning and last all day long until I passed out at night. One leg or the other (funny, not both together) would start jerking, perhaps once every few seconds continue unabated all day. Spasms could be a mild annoying twitch to jerks so intense that the repeatedly lift/throw the leg up in the air and off of the chair or bed. I felt that if restrained, these violent spasms could tear tendons and dislocate joints. Morning to night - jerk, jerk, jerk, jerk.... how do you concentrate on your life when in a spasmodic state? Luckily these massive and continuous spasms have decreased in intensity and perhaps are attributed to vigorous exercise or restored neurological pathways(?).
At the Rehab hospital the physios tried to put me on a motorized bicycle in order to move my legs for exercise and circulation. It was quickly realized that my spasms wouldn't permit my use of the cycle as the bike would detect the spasm and shut down in order to prevent injury. My bike couldn't move my legs safely and I couldn't move my legs. Currently (Mar 08), I use the bike at the hospital daily and push the cycle to the upper limit of 120 rpm with half of the available resistance dialed in (6Nm). Think of it as going uphill. I usually manage to peddle the equivalent of 17 Km (10.5 mi) in a half hour period.

Spasms and Baclofen - In spite of being on the maximum dose of the anti-spasmodic Baclafin, I continued to have spasms and jerk continuously. (see above) Thinking it had no effect I gradually reduced the dosage to see what would happen. The spasmodic jerks didn't increase but what I found was that muscular tension increased and my legs would want to clamp together. It became very difficult to peddle the bike or put my pants on etc with the clamping action. I went back on the Baclafin.



15 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hello Sir. You may reply if you wish to this address - Garysmiling@live.co.uk
I have been searching for the effects of living daily with someone who has paralysis from the waist down. Pretty much to no avail. There appears to be so many things which can cause paralysis from tranverse myeliti/polio/spina bifida/friendreichs ataxia to a general accident. - I am wondering can you give me "any" information as to what you mush have had to endure in having very low / non existant mobility. - I udnerstand this is personal and possibly distressing my motives are pure-I am trying to assist a friend who I dont want to ask "right out" what happened? But she is in a chair and has numerous problems. I feel if i can relate to what she has been through on a more personal basis I may be able to support her better. So far on line all I have found is legal Jargon. -Thankyou. Your website is a tribute to your strengh of character and an inspiration to anyone suffering a simular circumstance. Well Done.
Gary

Anonymous said...

medical jargon - not legal jargon - that would be another issue im looking into :-) Gary.

Anonymous said...

I just wanted to say that i also have really bad nerve pain.. feeling and mobility are coming back but the first thing to come is that burning pain almost like frost bite, The only thing that i know to do is. I spend time everyday getting super relaxed, and it seams that it hurts more when i do it.. but i am convinced this is how i get feeling and mobility back as fast as posible. My never pain goes away once i have full feeling and mobility in that area, i hope this helps. i stoped all medications because they do nothing. I have learned to embrace it as a sign of nerve healing and i do everything to make it hurt more untill i get it back good luck

Anonymous said...

Hi there.
The "garysmiling@live.co.uk" post was mine. I just re found this site looking up my email address on google and came across it. The initial post was back when I had just met a lass who is wheelchair bound. We have been together nine months now :-)
And of course you were right "medical jargon not "legal Jargon"....that was another issue i was going through!...we'll save "that" story for another time...next life maybe...
Great info on your site. 5 stars. Hope's life's continuing to improve.
Gary.

Unknown said...

Hi.

I would like to know how has it been now since March 2008. I'm interested because your journey seems similar to mine.

I was shot on May, 12, 2012. I suffered a spinal cord injury at T6 level. I can't walk yet but I have these burning/ tingling sensation in my legs

Unknown said...

Hii
It's been 2 years I couldn't walk,i want to know is it possible for me to walk again .and how much time it will be take?

Unknown said...

Hi,
My husband is c5 quadriplegia.
Feb 11 ,2016.met an accident.
Now doing acupuncture at aurangabad.he hav burning sensation now.hav heaviness in legs.our doc has made many paraplegic walk.

Unknown said...

Please share ur experience that how u gt sensation and movements back.is these all good symptoms???

Unknown said...

Hello so I also paralyzed from the chest down how long after surgery did you begin to feel your trunk ?

Unknown said...

What surgery have you had done to help movement? my son paralysed chest down At 10 from viral infection, now almost 12 having tingling all over body to a point it freaks him out..Dont know how to help him deal with these sensation s any help appreciated..Thank you

Unknown said...

I just wanna how did u gain sensation and movement.as iam suffering from c4/c5/c6/c7 spinal cord injury please respond.my email
Jumgeyomcha@gmail.com

Anonymous said...

I would like to start off by saying congratulations on your recover! That's awesome! My boyfriend recently (Oct. 2017) suffered a t5 injury. He was diagnosed as incomplete t5 in February 2018. He experiences alot of what you said you did; legs feeling like they are soaking in club soda, tight elastic band around waist. Are there any special things you did in therapy to help your recovery such as electrotherapy or did you just do standard physical therapy exercises. I thank you for your time and hope to hear a response. I hope you are continuing to get stronger and feel better everyday.

Unknown said...

Hello, sir! My husband fell 3 months ago from a 3 metres roof and he broke his neck. He began to feel his feet burning and tingling, without feeling or moving his feet

Do you think it s a good thing?

Pls help

RAJESH KITHANI said...

Is acupunchure working i am near aurangabad so i wish to try

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