top of page
Symptoms of Thoracic Spinal Stenosis

 

Symptoms of Thoracic Spinal Stenosis

The spine contains a channel down its center, in which the spinal cord is located. Openings between the thoracic vertebrae, called foramina, allow the spinal nerves to leave the central nervous system and pass into the peripheral nervous system, where they supply nerve impulses that support motor, sensory and visceral functions. Stenosis refers to a narrowing of the channels through which the nerves and spinal cord pass. Spinal stenosis can compress nerves and adversely influence sensory, motor or organ function, causing a variety of symptoms.

 

Respiratory Disturbances

Minor injuries can cause spinal cord trauma in patients whose spinal canal has become stenotic. Injuries at the thoracic level in such patients can lead to paralysis of the muscles of respiration and cause symptoms such as difficulty breathing.

 

Pain, Numbness or Paresthesia

When the spine or spinal nerve roots are compressed by stenosis in the vertebral canal or in the foramen, nerve inflammation can cause pain. The location of these symptoms will most likely be in the area below the level of nerve injury, and thoracic stenosis can cause symptoms that extend into the legs.  At times the nerve impulses will be disrupted to the point where the patient experiences complete numbness in the affected areas. Paresthesia, a tingly “pins and needles” sensation, is another sensory disturbance associated with stenosis.

 

Muscle Weakness, Spasticity or Paralysis

Spinal stenosis can affect the motor neurons and disrupt the muscles that they serve. In addition to respiratory difficulties prompted by compression of the motor neurons to the muscles used in breathing, motor nerve disturbances caused by thoracic stenosis can adversely affect the leg muscles. These can manifest in symptoms such as spasticity, or uncontrollable movements, due to overactive muscle tone, or it can have the opposite affect and result in muscle weakness, or in extreme cases, paralysis. Muscle weakness due to thoracic stenosis can result in gait disturbances.

 

Vascular Disturbances

The upper thoracic levels of the spine contain nerves that affect the muscle tone of blood vessel walls. Stenosis in the upper thoracic levels can result in blood pressure disturbances. Lowered blood pressure due to nerve damage can lead to orthostatic hypotension, a condition that causes dizziness upon sudden positional changes.

© 2013 by KOIMedia group

bottom of page