• @dejected_warp_core
    link
    English
    373 days ago

    So… this sent me down a little rabbit hole. I just want to advise you all, fellow lemmings, to be good to your back from here on out.

    https://www.umms.org/ummc/health-services/orthopedics/services/spine/patient-guides/lumbar-herniated-disc

    As the annulus weakens, at some point you may lift something or bend in such a way that you cause too much pressure across the disc. The weakened disc ruptures while you are doing something that five years earlier would not have caused a problem. Such is the aging process of the spine.

    • The Bard in Green
      link
      fedilink
      English
      333 days ago

      My wife has a genetic disorder that (among many other things) causes her spine to herniate at the drop of a hat. She’s had to have emergency surgery multiple times.

      About a year and a half ago, a neurosurgeon was operating on her and came to talk to me and my mom who were waiting. She was extremely excited, in that like “academic who just saw something new” kind of way, because my wife had the third biggest herniation she’d ever seen, and the largest in a patient under 70 (my wife was 34 at the time). She asked if it would be OK if she invited a professor from the local university and a couple of his grad students to come look at it.

      • @dejected_warp_core
        link
        English
        143 days ago

        Oh wow. Congrats… I guess? Glad that your wife has access to good care for that condition.

        I’ve been in the ER for something that… well I won’t say, but it was of interest to the attending folks. Next thing I knew, there were two grad students in tow, eager to learn stuff that you only usually see in a textbook. I recall feeling strangely proud, and more proud than embarrassed (oddly enough). It was a weird experience.

      • @48954246
        link
        English
        83 days ago

        Would that genetic disease happen to be EDS? My wife has just come home from her third surgical visit for spinal problems, at 33 years old.

        Two previous discectomies. This last one was a double whammy of spinal decompression and a full on fusion.

    • @angrystego
      link
      English
      73 days ago

      Also the surgeries often have to be done from the front, so doctors have to put organs out of the way, operate the spine, put everything back. It’s really scary. Everytime I think of it I start sitting a little more upright.

  • @ladicius
    link
    English
    293 days ago

    I just sent this to someone with hefty spine troubles.

    I hope they don’t risk a disk when they laugh about this wonderfully dumb shit.

  • @Atropos
    link
    English
    173 days ago

    The spondylolisthesis (listhesis) one isn’t quite accurate - it should be the whole spine above the joint in question shifted forward. You don’t really see just one vertebral body sticking out like that.

  • 👍Maximum Derek👍
    link
    fedilink
    English
    183 days ago

    Fun fact: discs can herniate multiple times even after you’ve shrunk half an inch in height and think all the cream has been squeezed out from between the cookies.

  • @FlashZordon
    link
    English
    63 days ago

    My back hurts just looking at this. Herniated a disk a while back and I don’t wish that pain on my worst enemy.

  • @someguy3
    link
    English
    63 days ago

    I’m hungry now. Does that make me a cannibal?

    • @[email protected]OPM
      link
      fedilink
      English
      7
      edit-2
      3 days ago

      Hernia, but a little baby bump. My doctor describes it like having a tack in your back and I like that metaphor.

  • @Mojave
    link
    English
    13 days ago

    Schmorl’s node is hiding in plain site

  • Ken Oh
    link
    fedilink
    English
    13 days ago

    You need a DDD one where the cream is gone.

  • @DarkCloud
    link
    English
    13 days ago

    “Spine” being the most abnormal to have.