Have you been diagnosed with a herniated disc?
If so, you probably have the usual symptoms:
- Low backache
- Numbness (if the disc is actually pressing on a nerve)
- Leg pain
Those symptoms are no surprise.
But what may be a surprise are other symptoms:
- Severe, sharp, electric shock-like, shooting pain
- Deep burning or cold in the feet or legs
- Numbness, tingling or weakness in the feet and legs that doesn’t go away
- Radiating pain down the legs and into the feet
- Muscle spasms and deep muscle pain
And those symptoms could be caused by neuropathy – a condition you probably never heard of until you developed a herniated disc.
So Why Does a Herniated Disc Cause Neuropathy?
A herniated disc alone may not cause you that much pain. The pain you experience is caused by the disc putting pressure on the spinal cord and on nerve roots. The location and intensity of the pain you experience depends on which nerves are affected by the disc and where it’s putting pressure.
Let’s say the disc is putting pressure on nerves that lead to your feet. You will probably feel pain and numbness in your feet. The longer the pressure is on the nerve, the more the nerve will be damaged. That nerve damage can lead to neuropathy in your feet.
The same applies to the nerves in any other part of the body. If your disc is putting pressure on nerves that affect that part of the body, you’re in danger of developing nerve damage and neuropathy wherever the nerves are affected.
If you have any of the neuropathy symptoms we listed above, you need to see your doctor, preferably your local neuropathy clinician, as soon as possible. The longer you let the nerve damage go untreated, the more likely the damage will be permanent. Read more… »