Exams and Tests for Spinal Stenosis
Diagnosing spinal stenosis can be challenging. The symptoms can mimic those of other conditions, plus the symptoms can come and go. To figure out the cause of your spinal stenosis, your doctor will need to perform several exams and tests. These exams and tests will also help the doctor develop a treatment plan for youa way to manage your pain and other symptoms and to help you recover.
During your visit, your spine specialist will ask about your current symptoms and remedies you have already tried. He or she will ask some typical questions, such as:
- When did the pain start?
- What activities did you recently do?
- What have you done for your pain?
- Does the pain radiate or travel to other parts of your body (e.g., down your arm or down your leg)?
- Does anything reduce the pain or make it worse? Specifically, does walking downhill make it worse or better? What happens to your pain when you lean forward or sit down?
You may also need to have some imaging tests done to help your doctor diagnose the cause of your spinal stenosis.
You may have an X-ray, which can show the narrowed disc space, fractures, bone spurs (osteophytes), or osteoarthritis. A Computerized Axial Tomography scan (a CT or CAT scan) or a Magnetic Resonance Imaging test (an MRI) can show a bulging disc or a herniated disc.
Bone Scan: This will help your doctor detect spinal problems such as osteoarthritis, fractures, or infections. You will have a very small amount of radioactive material injected into a blood vessel. That will travel through your blood stream and be absorbed by your bones. More radioactive material will be absorbed by an area where there is abnormal activity-like an inflammation. A scanner can detect the amount of radiation in all your bones and show the "hot spots" (the areas with more radioactive material) to help your doctor figure out where the problem is.
CT Myelogram: In this test, you'll have a special dye injected into the area around your spinal cord and nerves. (Before that happens, the area will be numbed.) Then you'll have a CT scan done. The image will provide a detailed anatomic picture of your spine, especially of the bones, and the doctor will look at that to see if anything's pressing on your nerves.
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