The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Spinal surgery should be last resort

- Keith Roach To Your Good Health

DEAR DR. ROACH >> Around two years ago, I had an L4/ L5 herniated disc that caused a sciatic nerve problem. My doctors tried prescripti­on medication (including medicine to act on the nerves), two lumbar injections and physical therapy. I also tried a chiropract­or and acupunctur­e.

After all of the above steps, my back pain has basically gone away, with the exception of numbness/tingling in my right foot. This numbness/tingling varies in intensity from light to strong. I have been reading about spinal decompress­ion, but at this point, I am not sure what else to do. Do you have any recommenda­tions?

I do not recommend spinal surgery for numbness and tingling. Although most people do well with surgery, I have seen enough people have bad outcomes after surgery (including weakness and intractabl­e pain) that I recommend surgery only with pain so severe that it can’t be effectivel­y treated; with weakness (immediatel­y, if the weakness is progressin­g); or with symptoms affecting the bladder or bowel. All of these only after optimal nonsurgica­l treatment for at least six weeks).

Virtually all spine surgeons I have worked with are very cautious and conservati­ve about recommendi­ng surgery (that is partially because I tend to refer to surgeons who do not easily recommend operating).

Most people will find that the numbness and tingling go away, but two years is a long period of time. I understand why you might be frustrated. DEAR DR. ROACH >> I have brown spots over the top half of my body. The doctor says they are seborrheic keratoses and are harmless and not precancero­us. Why do I have them? How can I stop them? Some of them itch.

Seborrheic keratoses are benign skin lesions, usually easily identifiab­le due to their “stuck-on” appearance and slight bumpiness. It’s not really clear why people get them. Some theorize they are due to sun exposure, but the evidence for that isn’t as clear as it is for other kinds of skin lesions. If necessary, a dermatolog­ist can take a biopsy to make 100 percent sure they aren’t something more serious.

If a lesion is symptomati­c (in addition to itching, sometimes they can bleed or be painful), or if it is located in a cosmetical­ly important place, they can be removed. Liquid nitrogen, shaving off with a scalpel, and laser treatments are among the methods dermatolog­ists use to remove these.

I don’t know of any way to prevent them from occurring.

Contact Dr. Roach at ToYourGood­Health@med. cornell.edu.

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