|
Call emergency services immediately
if:
-
A fall from a height (such as off a stool or
ladder) or significant injury (such as a motor vehicle accident) has caused
numbness or weakness in one or both legs. A person who has a severe back
injury should not be moved until emergency medical assistance arrives.
-
Low back pain is accompanied by an inability
to move the arms or legs (paralysis), confusion, or shock.
-
A ground-level fall or moderate injury
(twisting the back, lifting a heavy object) has caused numbness or weakness
in one or both legs.
-
You have a sudden loss of bowel or bladder
control.
Call your doctor if:
-
Leg pain is accompanied by persistent
weakness, tingling, or numbness in any part of the leg from the buttock to
the ankle or foot.
-
New low back pain is accompanied by vomiting
and/or fever [101F or higher] that lasts longer than 48 hours.
-
Leg pain or intermittent weakness, tingling,
or numbness persists longer than 1 week despite home treatment.
-
You have back pain that either persists or
builds in intensity over a few weeks.
-
A back injury is work-related and symptoms do
not improve in 2 to 3 days.
-
Back pain is accompanied by pain during
urination or blood in the urine.
-
You have back pain that is worse when you are
resting than when you are active.
-
You notice a gradual increase in problems with
bowel or bladder control.
Watchful Waiting
If you have pain, numbness,
or tingling in one leg that gets worse with sitting, standing, or walking
(without any obvious leg weakness):
Call your doctor if:
-
Your leg pain does not improve.
-
Nerve-related symptoms-such as tingling or
numbness in your leg, or weakness in both legs and loss of bladder or bowel
control-get worse during or after a short period of bed rest.
-
You have gradually increasing weakness in both
legs or loss of bladder or bowel control.
Who To See
For diagnosis and
nonsurgical treatment of a herniated disc, you may see:
-
A family medicine doctor.
-
An internist.
-
A physical therapist.
-
A physiatrist (a specialist in physical
medicine and rehabilitation).
-
A rheumatologist.
-
A neurologist.
-
A doctor of osteopathy (osteopath).
For diagnosis and surgical
treatment of a herniated disc, specialists include:
-
An orthopedic surgeon.
-
A neurosurgeon.
Reference from
Healthwise
|