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अगर मेरी गर्दन और ऊपरी पीठ की सर्जरी के बाद फ्यूजन ठीक नहीं हो रहा है और मुझे जलन वाला दर्द बढ़ रहा है, तो मुझे क्या करना चाहिए?
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Bone and Orthopedic Conditions
Question #29865
41 days ago
132

अगर मेरी गर्दन और ऊपरी पीठ की सर्जरी के बाद फ्यूजन ठीक नहीं हो रहा है और मुझे जलन वाला दर्द बढ़ रहा है, तो मुझे क्या करना चाहिए?

Client_9c0dfb

मेरी गर्दन और ऊपरी पीठ की सर्जरी हुई थी। डिस्क बदली गई और टी1 तक फ्यूजन किया गया। 3 महीने हो गए हैं और यह फ्यूज नहीं हो रहा है। मुझे बताया गया कि स्क्रू अभी भी ठीक हैं, लेकिन हर दिन जलन बढ़ती जा रही है।

How would you describe the burning pain?:

- Constant and worsening

Have you noticed any changes in your mobility since the surgery?:

- Slightly decreased mobility

What medications are you currently taking for pain management?:

- Over-the-counter pain relievers

Have you experienced any other symptoms besides the burning pain?:

- Numbness or tingling

How often do you follow up with your surgeon or healthcare provider?:

- Monthly

Have you been participating in any physical therapy or rehabilitation?:

- No, not yet

Do you have any history of smoking or other habits that could affect healing?:

- No, I do not smoke
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Doctors' responses

Dr. Bharat Joshi
I’m a periodontist and academician with a strong clinical and teaching background. Over the last 4 years and 8 months, I’ve been actively involved in dental education, guiding students at multiple levels including dental hygienist, BDS, and MDS programs. Currently, I serve as a Reader at MMCDSR in Ambala, Haryana—a role that allows me to merge my academic passion with hands-on experience. Clinically, I’ve been practicing dentistry for the past 12 years. From routine procedures like scaling and root planing to more advanced cases involving grafts, biopsies, and implant surgeries. Honestly, I still find joy in doing a simple RCT when it’s needed. It’s not just about the procedure but making sure the patient feels comfortable and safe. Academically, I have 26 research publications to my credit. I’m on the editorial boards of the Archives of Dental Research and Journal of Dental Research and Oral Health, and I’ve spent a lot of time reviewing manuscripts—from case reports to meta-analyses and even book reviews. I was honored to receive the “Best Editor” award by Innovative Publications, and Athena Publications recognized me as an “excellent reviewer,” which honestly came as a bit of a surprise! In 2025, I had the opportunity to present a guest lecture in Italy on traumatic oral lesions. Sharing my work and learning from peers globally has been incredibly fulfilling. Outside academics and clinics, I’ve also worked in the pharmaceutical sector as a Drug Safety Associate for about 3 years, focusing on pharmacovigilance. That role really sharpened my attention to detail and deepened my understanding of drug interactions and adverse effects. My goal is to keep learning, and give every patient and student my absolute best.
40 days ago
5

Hello dear I think the probable causes are Nerve irritation Disc infection Delayed healing Trauma internal Iam suggesting some medication and precautions for improvement Please follow them for atleast a week Diclofenac sodium gel topical application twice a day for 15 days Voveron xr 50 mg twice a day for 5 days Hot fomentation application twice a day for 5 days Crave bandage application twice a day for 5 days In addition please get following tests done for confirmation of exact diagnosis and best treatment Please share the result with orthopedic surgeon for better clarity CBC Esr X ray Cervical spine USG Ct scan of recommended by orthopedic surgeon Hopefully you recover soon Regards

3351 answered questions
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Dr. Arsha K Isac
I am a general dentist with 3+ years of working in real-world setups, and lemme say—every single patient teaches me something diff. It’s not just teeth honestly, it’s people… and how they feel walking into the chair. I try really hard to not make it just a “procedure thing.” I explain stuff in plain words—no confusing dental jargon, just straight talk—coz I feel like when ppl *get* what's going on, they feel safer n that makes all the difference. Worked with all ages—like, little kids who need that gentle nudge about brushing, to older folks who come in with long histories and sometimes just need someone to really sit n listen. It’s weirdly rewarding to see someone walk out lighter, not just 'coz their toothache's gone but coz they felt seen during the whole thing. A lot of ppl come in scared or just unsure, and I honestly take that seriously. I keep the vibe calm. Try to read their mood, don’t rush. I always tell myself—every smile’s got a story, even the broken ones. My thing is: comfort first, then precision. I want the outcome to last, not just look good for a week. Not tryna claim perfection or magic solutions—just consistent, clear, hands-on care where patients feel heard. I think dentistry should *fit* the person, not push them into a box. That's kinda been my philosophy from day one. And yeah, maybe sometimes I overexplain or spend a bit too long checking alignment again but hey, if it means someone eats pain-free or finally smiles wide in pics again? Worth it. Every time.
40 days ago
5

Hello

Persistent burning pain and numbness 3 months after a cervical/thoracic fusion can mean ongoing nerve irritation, inflammation, or delayed fusion healing. Even if the screws look stable, worsening burning pain should be reassessed by your spine surgeon soon, especially since your mobility is decreasing.

You may need updated imaging such as a CT scan to evaluate fusion healing and to check for nerve compression or hardware-related irritation.

Avoid heavy lifting, twisting, or nicotine exposure, and do not start exercises without medical guidance. Since OTC medications are not controlling the pain, ask your surgeon whether prescription nerve pain medications or supervised physical therapy would help.

Seek urgent care immediately if you develop weakness, loss of bladder or bowel control, fever, severe swelling, or rapidly worsening numbness.

Take care

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Dr. Nirav Jain
I am a qualified medical doctor with MBBS and DNB Diploma in Family Medicine from NBEMS, and my work has always been centered on treating patients in a complete, not just symptom based way. During my DNB training I rotated through almost every core department—Internal medicine, Pediatrics, Obstetrics & Gynecology, Surgery, Orthopedics, ENT, Dermatology, Psychiatry, Emergency medicine. That mix gave me the skill to manage acute illness, long term disease and preventive care together, something I find very important in family practice. In psychiatry I worked closely with patients who struggled with depression, anxiety, stress related problems, insomnia or substance use. I learned not just about medication but also about simple psychotherapy tools, psycho education and how to talk openly without judgement. I still use that exp in family medicine, specially when chronic disease patients also face mental health issues. My time in General surgery included assisting in minor and major procedures, managing wounds, abscess, sutures and emergencies. While I am not a surgeon, this gave me confidence to recognize surgical cases early, provide first line care and refer fast when needed, which makes a big difference in online or OPD settings. Now I work as a consultant in General medicine and Family practice, with focus on both in-person and online consultation. I treat conditions like fever, infections, gastrointestinal complaints, respiratory illness, and also manage diabetes, hypertension, thyroid disorders, and lifestyle related chronic diseases. I see women for PCOS, contraception counseling, menstrual health, and children for common pediatric issues. I also dedicate time to preventive health, lifestyle counseling and diet-sleep-exercise advice, since these small changes affect long term wellness more than we often realize. My key skills include holistic diagnosis, evidence based treatment, chronic disease management, mental health support, preventive medicine and telemedicine communiation. At the center of all this is one thing—patients should feel heard, safe, and guided with care that is both professional and personal.
40 days ago
5

Hello, thank you for sharing your concern. Three months after a cervical/upper thoracic fusion, it is still possible for the fusion to continue healing, so “not fully fused yet” does not automatically mean the surgery has failed. The fact that your surgeon says the screws/hardware are stable is reassuring.

However, worsening burning pain every day together with numbness/tingling suggests ongoing nerve irritation or inflammation and should be reassessed rather than simply watched.

Possible causes can include:

- Postoperative nerve irritation - Slow fusion/healing process - Residual nerve compression - Scar tissue around nerves - Less commonly hardware-related irritation despite stable screws

Because your symptoms are worsening instead of gradually improving, it would be reasonable to contact your spine surgeon again sooner for reevaluation. You may need repeat imaging such as:

- X-ray - CT scan - or MRI depending on their assessment

Also, many patients benefit from supervised physical therapy after fusion surgery once the surgeon feels it is safe.

For now:

- Avoid lifting, bending, twisting, or sudden neck movements - Maintain good posture/support - Avoid neck manipulation or aggressive stretching

Seek urgent care if you develop:

- Arm or leg weakness - Loss of balance - Loss of bowel/bladder control - Severe worsening numbness

Final Prescription (Temporary Symptomatic Advice):

- Tab Paracetamol 650 mg SOS after food for pain - Continue surgeon-advised precautions and activity restrictions - Avoid self-starting strong painkillers or steroids without evaluation

Advice: Because the burning pain is progressively worsening, follow-up with your spine surgeon is important to rule out persistent nerve compression or delayed postoperative complications.

Feel free to reach out again.

Regards, Dr. Nirav Jain MBBS, D.Fam.Medicine

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Dr. Alan Reji
I'm Dr. Alan Reji, a general dentist with a deep-rooted passion for helping people achieve lasting oral health while making dental visits feel less intimidating. I graduated from Pushpagiri College of Dental Sciences (batch of 2018), and ever since, I've been committed to offering high-quality care that balances both advanced clinical knowledge and genuine compassion for my patients. Starting Dent To Smile here in Palakkad wasn’t just about opening a clinic—it was really about creating a space where people feel relaxed the moment they walk in. Dental care can feel cold or overly clinical, and I’ve always wanted to change that. So I focused on making it warm, easygoing, and centered completely around you. I mix new-age tech with some good old-fashioned values—really listening, explaining stuff without jargon, and making sure you feel involved, not just treated. From regular cleanings to fillings or even cosmetic work, I try my best to keep things smooth and stress-free. No hidden steps. No last-minute surprises. I have a strong interest in patient education and preventive dentistry. I genuinely believe most dental issues can be caught early—or even avoided—when patients are given the right information at the right time. That’s why I take time to talk, not just treat. Helping people understand why something’s happening is as important to me as treating what’s happening. At my practice, I’ve made it a point to stay current with the latest innovations—digital diagnostics, minimally invasive techniques, and smart scheduling that respects people’s time. I also try to make my services accessible and affordable, because good dental care shouldn’t be out of reach for anyone.
40 days ago
5

Worsening burning pain with numbness/tingling three months after cervical-thoracic fusion surgery can occur from nerve irritation, delayed fusion, hardware-related irritation, scar tissue, or less commonly infection, and the fact that fusion is “not progressing” deserves close follow-up with your spine surgeon. Stable screws are reassuring, but increasing symptoms should not be managed only with over-the-counter medication without reassessment, especially since your mobility is decreasing and the burning sensation is worsening daily. Please contact your spine surgeon promptly for repeat imaging (often X-ray or CT), neurological examination, and discussion about pain control and starting supervised rehabilitation or physical therapy, and seek urgent care if you develop weakness, loss of bladder/bowel control, fever, or rapidly worsening numbness.

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Dr. Nikhil Chauhan
I am currently working as a urologist and kidney transplant surgeon at Graphic Era Medical College & Hospital, Dehradun. It's a role that keeps me on my toes, honestly. I handle a pretty wide range of urology cases—stones, prostate issues, urinary tract obstructions, infections, you name it. Some are straightforward, others way more complex than you expect at first glance. Every patient walks in with a different story and that’s what keeps the work real for me. Kidney transplant surgery, though, that’s a whole different zone. You’re not just working on anatomy—you’re dealing with timelines, matching, medications, family dynamics, emotional pressure... and yeah, very precise coordination. I’m part of a team that manages the entire transplant process—from evaluation to surgery to post-op care. Not gonna lie, it’s intense. But seeing someone who’s been on dialysis for years finally get a new shot at life—there’s nothing really like that feeling. In the OR, I’m detail-focused. Outside of it, I try to stay accessible—patients don’t always need answers right away, sometimes they just need to feel heard. I believe in walking them through what’s going on rather than just giving reports and instructions. Especially in transplant cases, trust matters. And clear, honest conversation helps build that. Urology itself is such a misunderstood field sometimes. People ignore symptoms for years because it feels “awkward” or they think it’s not serious until it becomes unmanageable. I’ve had patients who came in late just because they were embarassed to talk about urine flow or testicular pain. That’s why I also try to make the space judgment-free—like whatever it is, we’ll figure it out. At the end of the day, whether I’m scrubbing in for surgery or doing OPD rounds, I just want to make sure what I do *actually* helps. That the effort’s not wasted. And yeah, some days are frustrating—some procedures don’t go clean, some recoveries take longer than they should—but I keep showing up, cause the work’s worth doing. Always is.
40 days ago
5

Hi there. Thank you for sharing these details so clearly. I’m sorry you’re going through this — increasing burning pain after spinal fusion is not something to ignore, especially at 3 months.

Here is what you need to know and do right now:

· Burning pain + numbness/tingling = possible nerve irritation or inflammation, even if screws look OK on imaging · No fusion at 3 months is not necessarily abnormal (fusion takes 6–12 months), but worsening symptoms are a red flag · No physical therapy yet + decreasing mobility = muscles and nerves may be getting tighter, adding to pain · OTC pain relievers alone are unlikely to control this type of nerve-related burning

Immediate next steps:

· Contact your surgeon urgently — do not wait for your next monthly visit · Ask for a nerve study (EMG/NCS) or MRI to check for nerve compression, scar tissue, or inflammation · Ask about nerve-specific medications (gabapentin, pregabalin, etc.) — OTC meds won’t fix burning nerve pain · Start gentle, supervised physical therapy as soon as your surgeon clears it

Do not ignore worsening burning pain — it can mean nerves are under pressure. Early action protects recovery.

Dr. Nikhil Chauhan

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Dr. Prasannajeet Singh Shekhawat
I am a 2023 batch passout and working as a general physician right now, based in Hanumangarh, Rajasthan. Still kinda new in the bigger picture maybe, but honestly—every single day in this line teaches you more than textbooks ever could. I’ve had the chance to work under some pretty respected doctors during and after my graduation, not just for the clinical part but also to see how they handle people, real people, in pain, in panic, and sometimes just confused about their own health. General medicine covers a lot, right? Like from the smallest complaints to those random, vague symptoms that no one really understands at first—those are kinda my zone now. I don’t really rush to label things, I try to spend time actually listening. Feels weird to say it but ya, I do take that part seriously. Some patients just need someone to hear the whole story instead of jumping to prescription pads after 30 seconds. Right now, my practice includes everything from managing common infections, blood pressure issues, sugar problems to more layered cases where symptoms overlap and you gotta just... piece things together. It's not glamorous all the time, but it's real. I’ve handled a bunch of seasonal disease waves too, like dengue surges and viral fevers that hit rural belts hard—Hanumangarh doesn’t get much spotlight but there’s plenty happening out here. Also, I do rely on basics—thorough history, solid clinical exam and yeah when needed, investigations. But not over-prescribing things just cz they’re there. One thing I picked up from the senior consultants I worked with—they used to say “don’t chase labs, chase the patient’s story”... stuck with me till now. Anyway, still learning every single day tbh. But I like that. Keeps me grounded and kind of obsessed with trying to get better.
40 days ago
5

Hello Thank you for sharing these details. After neck and upper back (cervical and upper thoracic) fusion surgery, it can take several months for the bones to fully fuse, but increasing burning pain three months after surgery is not typical and should not be ignored.

What this could mean: - Sometimes, bone fusion takes longer, especially if there are risk factors like smoking, diabetes, or poor bone health. - Persistent or worsening burning pain could be due to nerve irritation, inflammation, or, rarely, issues like infection or hardware (screw/plate) irritation—even if the screws are in place. - Burning pain can also be a sign of nerve healing, but if it’s getting worse, it needs attention.

What you should do: - Contact your spine surgeon or orthopedic doctor as soon as possible to discuss these symptoms. - They may want to do new X-rays or a CT scan to check the fusion progress and look for any complications. - Blood tests may be needed to rule out infection. - Do not ignore increasing pain, especially if you develop fever, redness, swelling, or weakness/numbness in your arms or legs.

In the meantime: - Avoid heavy lifting or sudden neck movements. - Note any new symptoms (like fever, chills, or neurological changes).

Thank you

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The burning sensation and lack of fusion you’re experiencing after cervical and upper thoracic spine surgery is not unusual, but it’s something that needs closer evaluation. When fusion isn’t progressing as expected, certain factors should be considered. First, review your activity levels with your healthcare provider—sometimes limitations are necessary to allow proper healing. Avoid heavy lifting, sudden neck movements, and anything particularly strenuous unless explicitly approved by your doctor. Maintaining a proper posture and using support like a cervical collar if recommended can be helpful. Nutrition also plays a critical role; ensure that you have an appropriate intake of calcium, vitamin D, and protein to support bone healing, while consulting nutrition resources or a dietitian if needed. Smoking cessation is crucial, as tobacco use can significantly impair bone healing.

It is also vital to rule out any potential complications or issues that might be causing the increased pain. Infection, hardware malposition, or delayed union are possibilities that your surgeon should investigate further, ideally through imaging studies like X-rays or a CT scan. Schedule a follow-up appointment with your surgical team to discuss these concerns and potentially adjust your postoperative care plan. They might consider additional treatments such as physical therapy, pain management strategies, or other interventions, but this should be guided by your current condition and the surgeon’s evaluation. Persistent and worsening pain should not be ignored, as timely intervention is crucial for the best outcomes.

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