Cervical Stenosis

Most spine pain never needs surgery. OSI evaluates you, orders imaging only when it will actually change the plan, and walks you through the non-operative care that handles the vast majority of spine problems — activity guidance, physical therapy, medications, and bracing.

Overview

what it is and why it matters
Cervical spinal stenosis on MRI. Sepeteus1 2018 CC BY-SA 4.0.

Cervical stenosis is narrowing of the spinal canal in your neck — to the point where the spinal cord or the nerve roots branching off it get squeezed. Most cases build up gradually over decades from age-related changes (the discs thin out, the joints enlarge, bony spurs form, the ligaments inside the canal thicken). Some people are born with naturally narrow canals, which puts them at higher risk earlier.

When only the canal is narrow but the cord itself isn't being squeezed, you may have no symptoms at all for years. When the cord IS being compressed — a condition called cervical myelopathy — symptoms include clumsy hands (dropping things, struggling with buttons), unsteady walking, and in severe cases problems with bladder or bowel control.

Symptoms

what patients describe

The tricky thing about cervical stenosis is that many people have a narrow canal and don't know it — the cord has enough room to function normally, and there are no symptoms at all. When the narrowing progresses far enough to compress the spinal cord (a condition called cervical myelopathy), the signs tend to creep in gradually and can be easy to dismiss. Your hands may feel clumsy — you fumble with buttons, have trouble texting, or keep dropping things. Your handwriting may get noticeably worse.

Walking often changes next: you feel unsteady on your feet, especially in the dark or on uneven ground, and may find yourself holding onto railings you never used to need. Some people notice a heavy or stiff feeling in their legs, or that their feet seem to "stick" to the floor. In advanced cases, bladder urgency or difficulty with bowel control can develop — those are signs that the cord compression is severe and needs urgent evaluation. If only nerve roots (not the cord) are being squeezed, the pattern looks more like cervical radiculopathy — pain, numbness, or weakness in one arm.

Diagnosis

exam first, imaging second

MRI is the definitive test — it shows exactly how narrow the canal is and whether the cord itself is being changed by the pressure. A CT myelogram (a CT scan with contrast injected around the cord) is used when you can't have an MRI, or when bone detail matters most for planning surgery. The clinical severity of myelopathy is graded with a standardized score (the mJOA scale) that your surgeon will track over time.

Treatment Path

how care progresses at OSI
1

Activity modification

Avoiding contact sports and activities with significant fall or jolt risk while you're being evaluated — a serious neck impact in a narrow canal can do real damage.

2

Physical therapy

For mild stenosis without cord compression, physical therapy can maintain function and ease neck pain — strength, mobility, and posture work.

3

NSAIDs

An over-the-counter anti-inflammatory like ibuprofen or naproxen handles most flares of neck or arm pain. For more severe acute pain, a short tapering course of oral steroids (a Medrol Dosepak) can dramatically calm the inflammation around the nerve.

If Surgery Is Truly Needed

rare for most patients

Surgery helps only a small minority of spine patients — usually those with a specific structural problem plus a nerve issue that isn’t getting better with a structured non-operative trial. When that step is genuinely warranted, OSI coordinates it the same way we coordinate every other part of your care: imaging, records, and the handoff are handled for you, so no part of the process falls on your shoulders.

Emergency. Sudden loss of hand dexterity, worsening balance, arm or leg weakness, or loss of bladder or bowel control can reflect spinal-cord compression — go to the nearest emergency department rather than waiting for a clinic appointment.

Providers Who Treat Cervical Stenosis

spine team

Further Reading

authoritative sources

External patient-education references and related OSI pages for additional background:

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