Hi again Gcoe, and thank you very much again for your response!

Quote Originally Posted by gcoe View Post
Hi Athon

Not sure about that. The type of pain you described sounds like nerve pain. For example if there something like a neuroma that can give you an electric shock/jolting like pain. A neuroma is where a nerve has been cut and it grows back into a localised bundled tangle.
That sounds familiar, maybe. Sometimes when I've had a sleep with my arm thing on and I have avoided sleeping on that bad side, if I am careful what I do I will be somewhat pain-free in the morning, then it will get to a certain time in the day and I might just be walking or standing somewhere and then I will feel something like .. I don't know how to describe it. Like a worm or something wriggling around in there for two seconds or so? Right near that same spot. If I am having a morning where there's not much pain, then I feel that happen, within ten minutes I'll be aching away and the rest of the day will be very painful for me. The 'worm' part doesn't actually hurt in itself. It's just a squirmy little feeling in there.

what is known as alodynia - that is a sensory stimulus (in this case your reaching movement) which is normally quite pain free is experienced as painful.
I'm sure I probably do experience that as well as part of the bigger picture of suffering from chronic pain, and, I'm no Doctor, but what I'm experiencing with this specific, sharp, sparking pain doesn't sound like it matches up to the Alodynia description. What I'm talking about is a movement that I can't actually replicate except in one circumstance - when that area is extremely relaxed. I can feel different muscles/tendons/whatever is in there kick in. The whole thing is a bit of an alien feeling to my normal movements. It just moves a bit differently and feels different. Normally that area is tense all day, and I simply cannot relax the area enough to duplicate the move. My shoulder must be relaxed to a certain degree, my back, my neck, it all has to relax to a point where I just move without the tension that I normally do, totally forgetting that it's going to crunch me.

Imagine you're going around all the time every day holding your head to the side with a tennis-ball between your cheek and your shoulder, holding it there. Head tilted, shoulder raised, muscles bunched. Then at night you get home and sit down and watch some movie for a couple of hours and the ball falls out without you noticing and your shoulder drops down to it's lowest position and your head moves back upright, or even a little bit toward the other side. You see something on the shelf next to you and go to reach for it just with your arm (no real neck or shoulder movement to go with it) Right then when your arm is almost fully extended. Crunch! It's not the same movement with different results. I'm utilizing different stuff and moving things in there in a different way, activating things that are never normally activated because of the tension that is usually maintained in that area.

In my example you're probably just pulling a muscle of some kind, but this feels and sounds nothing like a pulled muscle.

I wanted to clarify about the volume of that sound, too - I'm not sure if it'd be all that audible to others unless they were right next to my neck. That's the sound I'm referring to. It's not some booming noise going on in case I've given the wrong impression (not that you indicated I had, just trying to be as honest as I can)

Another thing which I'm not sure would have any relevance or not - I noticed around the time that when the pain first started to get to me, if I was under the shower, that if I kept the water beam fairly small and had it pointed directly at the spot where the pain always is, that I could pretty much turn it up to extremely hot temperatures and never feel it. If I moved off that spot it would be stingingly hot, but on that spot I could (and still can) pump the temperature up to pretty much anything and not feel it. It doesn't feel particularly numb to touch the area in a shallow way, but I did intentionally hit it with objects a few times when I was younger out of frustration, and I remember quite clearly that it was fairly numb to any and all blows I delivered, and, as I said, I simply have no temperature sensation in that specific place there at all.

If you like tell us about how it all started all those years ago.
Hundreds of hours in front of a computer screen with no concern for posture, carrying a huge bag for miles stacked with books always on the one shoulder, a fall where a chunk of hay landed on my back (it winded me, but I never felt anything other than what you'd expect and was fine afterwards), my Mother and Grandmother would get aches in that area too, sometimes, but I don't think either of them ever had any real problems with it - at least not like I have.

I think it might have the most to do with sitting in front of a computer for day after day after day, and that heavy bag. Sounds a bit stupid to say it, because then it turns out that it's all been my fault. Normally Doctors jump on the 'hay landing on me' thing, but people remember incidents that hurt them or make them feel or move differently; I don't remember that doing any of that. It knocked the wind out of me, but I never noticed anything lasting out of it.

No you are quite right this is not for pain management and in my opinion it is grasping at straws that a facet joint injury could be causing what you have now.
Well I must say I think you're very right - if you want to know the truth I was pretty disgusted by the way the diagnosis came about. The Doctor didn't even really test me. Laid me face-down, pushed on one spot (and one spot only) not even hard .. he asked 'Does that hurt?' .. it felt nothing like any of the pain I normally experience - it hurt minimally because he was pushing on a soft spot where I think anyone would report discomfort - I said 'err .. a bit', noncommittally. He stopped, and in a friendly manner said 'Get up', I was like 'What?', he said 'Get up, it's okay, I've seen enough' ... I was befuddled. He hadn't done anything. He didn't know anything about my case except the very brief introduction to it I'd given him that day. He booked me to come back in a couple of months time, gave me some injections and took a lot of my money.

I don't mean to speak ill of a Professional in the field - it's not like I'm naming anyone - and I'm not bitter about it, but I really wasn't impressed with that (I still sent in the post-injection results when they were due), just never went back. And, maybe it even is a facet-joint injury, but you'd never ascertain it from an examination like that.

Anyway, there's wall of text and a bit more of my story!

AThorn