Spinal Nerve Syndrome

The modern world is a world of high speeds, constant stress load and a catastrophic increase in the number of spinal diseases. Recently, back diseases have become a real threat to humanity. Every second person suffers from osteochondrosis. With this diagnosis, diseases of the musculoskeletal system and accompanying disorders in the functioning of the nervous system are observed. Vertebral syndrome, or vertebrogenic plexoparesis, is a direct consequence of osteochondrosis, which leads to the fact that the nerves of the spine are compressed and their functionality is lost.

This disease sometimes takes away a person’s ability to move. The disease is chronic and is treated by several doctors: a surgeon, a neurologist, and a physiotherapist. This disease begins with inflammation of the nerve roots, then with striking changes in the spinal discs. It is commonly called degenerative disc disease. Initially, the patient feels numbness in the legs, muscle weakness, pain in the lower back, and sometimes in the arms. Usually this signals deformation of the vertebrae - spondyloarthrosis or disc protrusion. At first it is reversible, but if it is not given attention, it can lead to ischemic changes in the spinal cord roots. This leads to spasms and even greater atrophy of the spinal nerves themselves, and after a month this stage already provokes inflammatory processes and compression of the spinal cord itself, which is called myeloradic.