The Shoulder
The Shoulder
63
warm-crane-296

Still in constant pain 4 months after getting hit — is this normal? What's actually helping people?

I honestly didn't think I'd still be dealing with this. Back in the spring I got slammed on the passenger side by a pickup that blew through a stop sign. Airbags went off, my sedan got pushed halfway into the next lane. I walked away from the scene thinking I was shaken up but okay.

Within 48 hours I couldn't turn my head without a stabbing sensation running down between my shoulder blades. That was four months ago and I'm still not back to normal — not even close.

Right now my days look like this: I wake up stiff every single morning, get headaches that start at the base of my skull and wrap around to my temples, and I get this weird tingling in my left arm that comes and goes. Walking up stairs flares everything up. Sitting at my desk for work is brutal.

MRI came back showing two bulging discs — one in my cervical spine, one in my lumbar. My GP referred me to a physiatrist but the wait list is long and I'm just kind of... treading water until then.

I guess my questions are:

  • Is 4+ months of this level of pain actually typical with disc injuries from crashes?
  • Should I be pushing harder for a different specialist? Like a neurologist or spine specialist instead of waiting?
  • Has anyone found anything that actually manages the burning/nerve pain beyond just pills? I hate how foggy the meds make me feel.

I'm not trying to be dramatic — I just genuinely didn't expect recovery from a car accident to feel like this. Any experiences or suggestions are really appreciated.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 18
    keen-dove-417

    I could have written this post myself about 18 months ago. Bulging disc in my neck from a rear-end collision and the burning nerve pain lasted WAY longer than anyone warned me about. Four months is honestly not unusual at all with disc involvement — I know that's not what you want to hear but you're not imagining it and you're not being dramatic. The tingling in the arm is the disc pressing on a nerve root. It eventually calmed down for me but it took closer to a year of consistent PT and some targeted injections.

    • 7
      level-overpass522

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 18
    cool-newt-048

    The symptom picture you're describing — bilateral headaches originating at the skull base, referred tingling down the arm, and that burning quality — really does fit a cervical radiculopathy pattern. That's nerve irritation, not just muscle soreness, and it genuinely takes longer to settle than soft tissue alone.

    A couple of things I'd push for while you wait for the physiatrist: ask your GP specifically about a referral to a neurologist if the arm tingling is getting worse or more frequent, not just stable. And if you haven't tried a TENS unit for the burning sensation, some people get real relief from those without the cognitive fog of medications. Also cold therapy (not heat) tends to work better for nerve-type burning in my experience. Hang in there — disc injuries from accidents are legitimately serious and your timeline is not unusual.

    • 20
      tidy-newt-391

      I used to work claims and I want to second what the person above said. When adjusters call injured people early and ask open-ended questions like 'how are you feeling?' or 'are you back to your normal activities?' — they are building a file. A casual 'I'm doing a little better' gets noted and can be used to minimize your claim later even if you're still genuinely suffering. You don't have to be rude, but you also don't owe them a health update. 'I'm still under medical care' is a complete sentence.

  • 19
    steady-owl-641

    Stop waiting passively for that physiatrist appointment. Call every week to get on a cancellation list. Meanwhile, call your GP back today and ask for a neurology referral to run parallel. You can see both. The system doesn't advocate for you — you have to push.

    • 21
      hearty-wren-790

      The fact that you got the MRI done and have actual imaging showing what's going on is genuinely good — a lot of people suffer for months without ever getting a concrete answer. You're not guessing anymore. That diagnosis is the foundation for getting the right treatment and for any legal or insurance process. It's frustrating but you're further along in understanding your injury than a lot of people at this stage.

  • 12
    patient-seal-161

    One thing worth knowing from a practical standpoint: make sure every single symptom — the headaches, the tingling, the difficulty with stairs, ALL of it — is being documented in your medical records at every appointment. Not just the disc findings. If there's any potential claim involved here, gaps between your reported symptoms and what's actually written down by your providers can cause real problems later. Keep a pain journal too, even just quick daily notes on your phone. Dates, symptom levels, how it affects your activities. It sounds tedious but it matters.

  • 17
    genuine-newt-541

    Please be careful about what you tell the at-fault driver's insurance right now. If they're calling you asking how you're feeling or suggesting you settle, do NOT give them a recorded statement about your condition while you're still actively symptomatic and your treatment isn't finished. They love to lock people into settlements before the full extent of the injury is understood. Four months in with unresolved disc issues is way too early to know your endpoint.

  • 13
    swift-seal-473

    Not legal advice, but from what I've seen — documented imaging findings combined with ongoing functional limitations (difficulty with stairs, affecting your work, altered daily activities) is exactly the kind of continuous symptom picture that matters if you eventually pursue a personal injury claim. The length of recovery isn't a weakness; persistent, documented injury from a crash often reflects the actual seriousness of the impact. Worth at least having a free consult with a PI attorney before you talk numbers with any insurer. Most won't charge you unless they recover something.

    • 19
      candid-dove-943

      Quick question — are you currently doing any physical therapy at all, or just waiting for the physiatrist? I ask because with disc injuries sometimes starting PT sooner rather than later can actually prevent things from worsening while you wait for specialists. Did any of your doctors suggest interim PT?

    • 3
      hopeful-rider298

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?