your disc between your lowest lumbar vertebra and your sacrum is inflamed and swelling out of where it belongs. it's a lot better than a protrusion or herniation so you're not in too bad of shape. use ice, ibuprofen, and take it easy.
A moderate diffuse disk bulge refers to a condition where the intervertebral disk extends beyond its normal confines, causing it to bulge slightly. This can sometimes result in compression of nearby structures like nerves, leading to symptoms such as pain, tingling, or numbness in the affected area. Treatment may involve rest, physical therapy, pain management, or in severe cases, surgery.
The ones in the bulge or halo are older star, the ones in the disk are younger.
There's a bulge pushing through the ring holding the vertebral disk between L4 and L5. The bulge is narrowing the opening for the spinal cord somewhat, and is also touching both sides of the nerves coming off the spinal cord at L5.
Disk herniation refers to an injury to the pad between the vertebral lumbar bones of the spine. Moderate central disk herniation refers to moderate injury that causes back pain but without particularly?æsignificant pain in the legs.
First of all, there are a great number of theories as to what should be called a "bulge". Before MRI, physicians could see an herniated disk with a special x-ray study called a myelogram, in which dye is injected. When MRI came about, all kinds of soft tissues were seen for the first time. Radiologists started describing disk bulges, something that had not ever been discussed before. Different radiologists will differ in what they all a bulge. A definitive article in the New England Journal of Medicine established, many years ago, that a disk "bulge" should be considered to be a normal finding. The healthy disk is elastic. If it were not, our spines would be rigid. In order to allow the bones of the spine, the vertebral bodies, to permit us to bend forward and backwards, the disk must give, bulge and stretch. If one bends forward, it must bulge in the front and straighten in the back. In the standing position, the weight of the body might cause circumferential bulging. In a large percentage of the population, the disk will have some degree of bulge, normally, even when lying flat, as on the MRI table. A disk bulge should not be confused with an herniation. A disk bulge should not be treated. Unfortunately, there are practitioners who will make a big thing of this normal MRI finding, and try to convince their patients that the cause of pain has been found and that the bulge needs to be treated. But, since a disk bulge is a normal finding, there is no need to be concerned at to whether or not it will return to its normal place. It is in its normal place already.
A disk bulge at the C6-C7 level indicates that the intervertebral disc has protruded slightly, pressing against the thecal sac, which contains the spinal cord and nerve roots. This bulge is causing moderate narrowing of the foramina, the openings through which spinal nerves exit the spine, potentially leading to nerve compression. The near contact with the spinal cord suggests that there may be a risk of neurological symptoms, such as pain, weakness, or numbness, in the areas served by the affected nerves. Overall, this condition may require monitoring or treatment to alleviate symptoms.
It looks more like a gigantic disk, with a bulge in the middle.
First of all, I wouldn't have surgery for a disk bulge unless I were in severe pain for a long time and other therapeutic options (chiropractic, physiotherapy, etc) have not worked, or, if there were severe neurological symptoms that were either not improving with therapy or were getting worse. If all these things were the case, then there are a few options for surgery, dependent on the surgeon, the disk, the patients wishes, the country/region, etc. Some possibilities are: 1) remove the extrudate (material exiting the disk if it were a true herniation), or shave off some off the bulge with microsurgery 2) remove the disk and fuse the C6 and C7 vertebrae together forever 3) remove the disk and replace it with an artificial disk
A galaxy contains stars, gas and dust. In a spiral galaxy like the Milky Way, the stars, gas, and dust are organized into a "bulge," a "disk" containing "spiral arms," and a "halo." Elliptical galaxies have a bulge-like central region and a halo, but do not have a disk.
Usually only one.
this condition can also lead to specific problems related to nerve functioning. For example, the outer edge of a disk may tear, allowing the gelatinous material inside to bulge outward (herniated disk ).
The disks in question would be found between the vertebrae where they cusion the joint. Injury or degenerative disease will cause the surface of the disk to deteriorate and bulge. The bulging presses on nerves and can cause paralysis or pain.