15/12/2025
MRI -Cervical spine
The patient presented to me for an initial assessment complaining of: โ tingling and numbness affecting the jaw โ paraesthesia in the upper limbs โ persistent neck and shoulder discomfort
๐ Based on the clinical assessment, the symptoms did not fit a simple musculoskeletal pattern. For this reason, I referred the patient for imaging and neurophysiological investigations, prioritising safety and diagnostic clarity.
๐ What the investigations revealed: โ multilevel cervical degenerative changes
โ severe foraminal narrowing at C5โC6 and C6โC7
โ an intradural, extramedullary lesion at the C3โC4 level, with imaging characteristics suggestive of a cervical meningioma, causing spinal cord compression, but without intrinsic cord signal change
โ EMG findings consistent with chronic C6โC8 radiculopathy, with no evidence of acute denervation
๐งฉ Why is this a complex and serious case?
Because it involves: โ genuine neurological symptoms
โ spinal cord compression
โ a benign tumour located in a highly sensitive and critical anatomical area
โ severe degenerative changes that can both mimic and exacerbate neurological symptoms
๐ In such cases, physiotherapy must be carefully dosed, highly individualised, and integrated within a multidisciplinary framework.
๐ค The patient is under my clinical observation and is currently undergoing tailored physiotherapy treatment, with clear objectives: symptom management, neurological protection, and functional preservation, alongside ongoing specialist monitoring.
๐ Key educational message:
Not all numbness should be treated with generic exercises. Sometimes, the most important step is knowing when to pause, investigate, and choose the safest pathway.