shu
New member
- Joined
- Mar 30, 2021
- Messages
- 3
- Reason
- Loved one DX
- Diagnosis
- 03/2021
- Country
- CA
- State
- ON
- City
- Waterloo
Symptoms my dad has been seeing:
- In September he started having problems in going for long walks as he used to due to weekness in left leg.
- In December he started lifting his left leg when he was walking and also his left hand was showing weekness.
- In March his left leg became extremely week where he had couldn't walk without holding something, and his left hand can not completely fold now
My dad has had an EMG done already along with MRIs and blood tests. All the tests came clean and the spine MRI showed the following:
C3-C4: Grade -3 degenerative spondylosis and disc disease with pseudo disc bulge
causing anterior thecal sac indentation. No e/o significant cord compression or
neural foraminal narrowing.
C4-C5: Block vertebra involving C4-C5. There is no evidence of disc disease or
protrusion, central canal stenosis, or neural foraminal narrowing.
C6-C7: Disc disease with diffuse disc bulge causing anterior thecal sac indentation.
No e/o significant cord compression or neural foraminal narrowing.
C5-C6: Disc disease with diffuse disc bulge causing cervical cord indentation
(towards left side). No e/o significant neural foraminal narrowing.
Then he had an NCS + EMG done which showed the following result:
NCS:
* Distal asymmetrical large fibre motor axonal polyneuropathy / polynewronopathy involving left upper limb (in C8-T1 distribution) and both lower limbs (in common peroneal nerve / L5 distribution left > right).
* Mild deegree of carpar tunner syndrome bilaterally.
EMG:
* Active + chronic denervation in proximal + distal muscles of left upper limb, lower limb distal muscles of right lower limb but sparing thoracic and craniobulbar muscles.
* Neurogenic changes seen in proximal + distal muscles of upper limbs and lower limbs with significant motor unit dropout (left > right)
. Does he have ALS?
Sorry I would have asked these questions more directly to my dads doctor but he is currently in Indian and I am in Canada trying to figure this out.
- In September he started having problems in going for long walks as he used to due to weekness in left leg.
- In December he started lifting his left leg when he was walking and also his left hand was showing weekness.
- In March his left leg became extremely week where he had couldn't walk without holding something, and his left hand can not completely fold now
My dad has had an EMG done already along with MRIs and blood tests. All the tests came clean and the spine MRI showed the following:
C3-C4: Grade -3 degenerative spondylosis and disc disease with pseudo disc bulge
causing anterior thecal sac indentation. No e/o significant cord compression or
neural foraminal narrowing.
C4-C5: Block vertebra involving C4-C5. There is no evidence of disc disease or
protrusion, central canal stenosis, or neural foraminal narrowing.
C6-C7: Disc disease with diffuse disc bulge causing anterior thecal sac indentation.
No e/o significant cord compression or neural foraminal narrowing.
C5-C6: Disc disease with diffuse disc bulge causing cervical cord indentation
(towards left side). No e/o significant neural foraminal narrowing.
Then he had an NCS + EMG done which showed the following result:
NCS:
* Distal asymmetrical large fibre motor axonal polyneuropathy / polynewronopathy involving left upper limb (in C8-T1 distribution) and both lower limbs (in common peroneal nerve / L5 distribution left > right).
* Mild deegree of carpar tunner syndrome bilaterally.
EMG:
* Active + chronic denervation in proximal + distal muscles of left upper limb, lower limb distal muscles of right lower limb but sparing thoracic and craniobulbar muscles.
* Neurogenic changes seen in proximal + distal muscles of upper limbs and lower limbs with significant motor unit dropout (left > right)
. Does he have ALS?
Sorry I would have asked these questions more directly to my dads doctor but he is currently in Indian and I am in Canada trying to figure this out.