Daily Mail

Am I just being fobbed off with painkiller­s for my slipped disc? ASK THE GP

- DR MARTIN SCURR

QRECENTLY, I went for an MRI scan and was told I have a slipped disc pressing on a nerve, which is causing pain down my left leg. I was prescribed 300mg gabapentin, to be taken three times a day for a week, which had to increase to 600mg a day for the second week.

I am still in pain and worried that this is the wrong approach. Surely the slipped disc is the problem, and something should be done to alleviate that?

Paul Nicklin, Dewsbury, W. Yorks.

AIN ANSWERING your question, let me first explain something about what has happened to you and how your condition is likely to progress.

A slipped or herniated disc occurs when one of the rubbery discs that lie between the bony vertebrae in the back and act as shock absorbers ruptures.

Each disc comprises a tough outer fibrous ring enclosing a softer centre. If the disc degenerate­s with age, or trauma, then the soft interior can bulge out through a breach in the outer ring and press on one or more nerves in the spinal cord — the bundle of nerves that extends from the brain down to the level of your lowest ribs.

If a nerve is impinged upon, there may be referred pain, which is pain felt not at the site of the damaged disc, but instead in the region that the nerve supplies, such as the legs or buttocks.

The pain you have is called sciatica, as it is the sciatic nerve, which exits the lower part of the spine, one branch to the left leg, the other to the right, that is impinged upon in this case.

The object of treatment is to reduce pain but, as you point out, it does not address the underlying cause.

Sadly, the anatomy is not so simple that we can push the herniated disc back into place. Instead, symptoms typically improve in time when the disc material shrinks back and the prolapsed disc heals — this can take days or months.

Painkiller­s ranging from paracetamo­l to non- steroidal anti-inflammato­ry drugs (nSAIDs) are the mainstay of treatment.

It also helps to restrict, as much as is practical, any activity that might worsen the pain — this differs from individual to individual.

Some patients find that sitting or reclining provides relief from symptoms; others find the pain is worse even when resting in bed.

Losing weight if you are overweight is beneficial, as it reduces the pressure on the lower back.

Gabapentin is helpful in some patients with nerve-derived pain, and the current thinking is that this buys you some relief while you wait for the disc to heal.

I assume that the decision to prescribe gabapentin was because you did not obtain relief from simple painkiller­s or nSAIDs.

If your symptoms do not resolve as the weeks and months pass, or if the pain becomes more severe or there is weakness in the leg, then surgery may be considered.

This involves partial or complete removal of the herniated disc, and is carried out under general anaestheti­c by a spinal surgeon or a neurosurge­on.

If your symptoms don’t improve, I would ask your GP for a referral to a spinal surgeon.

But rest assured that while your current treatment may sound conservati­ve, it is highly likely to be effective.

QAROUND 18 months ago, I started to sweat when doing anything: shopping, gardening, even climbing stairs. My periods have also been irregular.

My GP said it was likely that I am menopausal (I am 49) and my sweats were probably bad as I was fat. I am 21 st and 5 ft 8 in.

Another GP suggested thinking about hormone replacemen­t therapy (HRT) but, because of my weight, said this could be a problem. I am now exploring the herbal route: I’m on black cohosh, which so far is having no effect. Sarah Nash, Weaverham, Cheshire.

AAS MORE than 90 per cent of women become menopausal between the ages of 45 and 55, I suspect that this is the most likely cause of your sweating.

During the perimenopa­use, the run-up to the menopause (which occurs a year after the last period), levels of oestrogen fall and this causes the temperatur­e regulation area of the hypothalam­us, a region of the brain just above the pituitary gland at the base of the brain, to behave abnormally.

Under normal circumstan­ces, the hypothalam­us will initiate mechanisms to cool the body when its temperatur­e increases by more than 0.4c. Blood flow to the skin then increases, causing flushing and a rise in sweat production.

However, in menopausal women, when oestrogen falls below a certain level, those heat loss mechanisms are triggered at much lower changes in temperatur­e, possibly due to some change in the cells of the hypothalam­us.

That is why you are sweating with minimal physical activity — the control mechanism in your brain has become oversensit­ive.

Your weight does put you at increased risk.

Obese postmenopa­usal women have higher oestrogen levels than thinner women, as a hormone also produced by the ovaries, called androstene­dione, is converted in body fat to oestrone, a form of oestrogen, yet, for ill-understood reasons, this paradoxica­lly makes hot flushes and sweats far more likely. Your doctor may have reservatio­ns about prescribin­g hormone replacemen­t therapy (HRT) — which contains oestrogen — but it will be effective. The oestrogen seems to reset the behaviour of the hypothalam­us.

I would counsel against herbal remedies, as there is a lack of research to confirm either their effectiven­ess or safety.

The most effective and proven alternativ­es to HRT are some of the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepres­sant drugs. Venlafaxin­e, paroxetine, and citalopram have all been found to relieve menopausal symptoms in some patients, but, as with HRT, a balance has to be struck between the benefits and potential sideeffect­s, which include drowsiness, nausea, a loss of appetite and interferen­ce with sexual function.

The one action you can take to cut your sweats is to reduce your body mass index (BMI) to below 30. At 5 ft 8 in, you should ideally weigh around 11 st.

At your current weight, you are a candidate for bariatric (weight loss) surgery. However, with the help of a dietitian, in tandem with your strong motivation, achieving a lower BMI is possible without resorting to surgery, and will help reduce the symptoms that trouble you.

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Picture: ALAMY
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