I have several disc bulges in my lumbar section, herniated discs at T11-T12 and C5-6 C6-7. Walking is my biggest problem , standing , then sitting to lying down. I know it's so important to keep moving but when the pain is so bad and tears flowing down your face how do you people do it. Please help me, I know I am making things worse just hanging around.
karenl
kalyn
Hi Karen
I am so sorry to hear of your great pain levels.
Have you talked with a PT to see what they may have to suggest?
I can walk with about a level of 3 maybe 4 of pain using my walking poles. Without them the pain level is 10+ and I can't walk.....
Ms. Humpty Dumpty Took a great fall and all the Drs and surgeons could not put her back together again.
After my fall I started to fall apart. L1-L2-L3-L4 - S1 & S2 gone. ( full herniation )Spinal stenosis, spinal arthritis, degenerative disk, scoliosis.
The spacers in your back are gone/going, spinal nerve damage.
Spinal spurs. Both knee caps & both hips have degenerative bone disease, arthritis and bone spurs.
No surgeries as Drs. don't think it will help and may make things worse.
Age 47 - Here to find & offer support.
I found that by making myself get up and walk, it helped kick in my body's natural endorphins after 15-20 minutes. I actually feel better and have better pain relief at this point, so I will then use that to extend my time walking.
I agree with Beth that having a PT give you guidance might be a big help. Have you discussed with your doc, just how much walking hurts you?
"C"
"The way I see it, if you want the rainbow, you gotta put up with the rain. "
- Dolly Parton
From reading your post, it appears that you have herniated discs at all three major spine levels.
(Cervical, Thoracic and Lumbar)
It was not clear if you have had surgery for any of these at this point or what treatment you are currently under.
Walking, or that matter almost any exercise for post surgical patients or those suffering from disc problems is the initial few times. It takes some courage but also willingness to do what is needed.
At the rehab aqua pool I go to, I have seen a number of post surgical patients who come into the pool and after their first visit the stop coming. Why? Because it hurts! Its not a question of being tough, its more a question of being strong willed, thinking positive and knowing that continuing to do walking or other exercises is going to be the key to your future well being
Ron DiLauro (aka PapaRon)


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Thanks to all that have answered. I have not had surgery yet. I am only 7 months into this pain and from I can see I am new with it compared to what most people have been going through. My Dr. does not want meworking becasue of the amount of walking I have to do for work. part of my job is to tour 86000. square ft. to ensure that my staff are cleaning as they should. This has put a lot of pressure on me because most days I can barely make it from the garage to my office .I have tried PT early on and it set me back. I ended up back in bed with heat , ice and pain meds for days. I have been to the pain clinic and received a few shots, so far they have not worked . I am due to go back in another shot in a week. I am going to listen to my doctor and take time off , try PT again and take it from there. I try not to take pain meds if I can help but lately I seem to be losing that battle.
neuro surgeon appt in 3 weeks , maybe he will have a better plan for me . I wonder if a walker on wheels would make it easier to walk . Maybe get out there and roll up and down the street , sounds better then sitting around doing nothing.
karenl
kalyn
Do you feel any better when pushing a shopping cart at the store? If not, I doubt the walker will make much difference for you.
With some spinal conditions, when a patient leans slightly forward, it opens up the disc spaces enough to give the spinal nerves just a tad more room and it hurts less to walk as a result.
It is important to keep exercising. If you have access to a pool, you can walk in the pool, or, better yet, get an exercise belt. Go in shoulder-deep water and "walk or run" with your legs, or cycle with your legs. This can provide some aerobic exercise and be gentle on your joints at the same time.
spondylolisthesis at L4-5; stenosis at L3-4 and L4-5
radiculopathy for about 3 years
PLIF (L4-L5)in Jan '08 (PEEK cage, rods & Screws, BMP); continued radiculopathy....
Lami-foraminotomy L5-S1 Jan '09; continued radiculopathy;
Bulging discs L3-4 & L5-S1; crazy screwed-up S1 nerve
***** I have no medical training and am in no way connected with the medical profession, other than doing my part to keep them at full employment. My posts are based on personal experience and knowledge gained through the adventures of living. Take them for what they are worth....
I'm sorry you're not able to walk much. I think it's a great idea to get a walker with wheels and a seat if that will get you out. I just got a manual treadmill and I just went on it for 5 minutes so far since I just got it last night but will try it a few times a day. I'm not able to get out and walk either and can't walk in the winter which is coming up so I'm trying the treadmill. I was lent a waler for a few weeks by my Mother's friend and I felt so liberated to get out and walk with it because I had something to hold on to. At least the treadmill has handles to hold me up also so I'm looking forward to trying some form of exercise. Good luck. Charry
My 2nd MRI showed no herniated disc and no stenosis. Mild loss of signal intensity in intervertebral discs L1-S1 and mild loss of height from L1-L4. Mild DDD throughout the lumber spine. Still have back pain and some leg tingling, numbness though. 3rd opinion Neurosurgeon Oct. 6, 2009.
1st report last year Feb. 2008.
L5-S1 herniated disc with annular tear with disc material in contact with L5 exiting nerve, arthropy facet joints L4-L5. 5 Epidurals. Facet joint injections and 64 trigger point injections. Off work 21 months due to back and leg pain. Not a surgical candidate x 2 Ortho opinions. (history C5-7 osteoarthritis and DDD)
Infrared Platinum heating pad 4x/day and while sitting.
MS Contin 120mg, Cymbalta 60mg, lasix 20mg, Diovan for B/P . oxazepam 30mg for sleep. Excercise ball, recumbent stationary bicycle 30 mins. day, posture-pump for lower back. Tried PT, accupuncture, traction. Pool therapy Oct. 27/2009
http://www.livestrong.com/article/14700-self-affirmations/
Charry
Karen,
I know how hard walking can be with a herniated disc. I herniated L5S1 and experienced a full month when any type of walking was torture. At the low point, I couldn't walk for more than 48 seconds without having to lie down from the agonizing pain.
My physical therapist was pushing me to walk, but she didn't want it to be an exercise in pain endurance. So this is what I did: I decided to just walk around the inside of my house, into every single room (8 rooms, including the bathroom). I couldn't do this continuously; so I gave myself permission to lie down at any point, in any of the rooms, when I had to. I'd lie down and rest until the pain subsided enough to get up. And I'd continue on, through each room, lying down as necessary. I did this 7 or 8 times a day. I'd also go out on the porch.
Gradually, as I improved, I was able to walk further. I expanded to out of doors: I took short walks in the yard, around the house, etc. I'd also lie down on the grass if the pain got too bad. (Only works when the weather's nice). Then I expanded, taking short walks around my rural small village. I even picked my walking routes strategically so I'd know I wd have a place to lie down other than just the side of the road. Now I can walk any distance, and I've even gone back to running (very gradually).
Walking is tricky when recovering, because all the science and literature says you have to do it to get better--but on the other hand, it does no good when it's horribly painful. When I started feeling ALOT better, there were a couple of occasions when I walked too far and too much, too soon, and as a result, had some pain setbacks. It's an individual balancing act--you have to have both caution AND bravery.
(Also, a word of caution about canes and walkers. I used a cane during the lowest point, and it may have helped a little. But after that, I found that walking with the cane didn't make the pain less or enable me to go further--but it did make me feel like I was frail and weak, so I put it away...)
Hope this helps. Good luck to you and hugs...Laura