Conditions · Fordham

Radiculopathy Treatment in Fordham

Radiculopathy occurs when a spinal nerve root is compressed or irritated — typically by a herniated disc or bone spur caused by trauma. Symptoms include radiating pain, numbness, tingling, and weakness that follow specific nerve distribution patterns.

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Radiculopathy Treatment for Fordham Patients

Radiculopathy After a Car Accident Near Fordham

Fordham is one of the Bronx's most accessible neighborhoods, centered on Fordham Road — the borough's busiest commercial corridor. Fordham Road carries bus, truck, and passenger traffic six lanes wide — pedestrian knockdowns from turning vehicles and rear-end collisions at the Grand Concourse intersection are among the most common mechanisms in and around Fordham. Radiculopathy occurs when a spinal nerve root is compressed or irritated — most commonly by a herniated disc or bone spur caused by traumatic force. The nerve root becomes inflamed and dysfunctional, producing symptoms along its specific distribution pattern. Cervical radiculopathy affects the arms; lumbar radiculopathy (sciatica) affects the legs.

Symptoms to Watch For

Sharp, shooting, or burning pain radiating along the affected nerve — down the arm (cervical) or down the leg (lumbar). Associated numbness, tingling, and weakness in specific muscle groups. The pain pattern follows a predictable dermatome map that allows the treating physician to identify the exact nerve root involved before imaging confirms it.

How MAIC Diagnoses Radiculopathy (pinched nerve, nerve root compression, sciatica)

Diagnosis begins with dermatomal mapping — testing sensation, reflexes, and strength in the specific distributions of each nerve root (C5-T1 for upper extremity, L2-S1 for lower). This clinical localization is then confirmed by MRI showing compression at the corresponding level. NCV/EMG electrodiagnostic testing provides the definitive objective confirmation — it measures the actual electrical function of the compressed nerve, grading the severity from mild demyelination to severe axonal loss.

Treatment at MAIC

Radiculopathy treatment escalates based on severity. Mild cases respond to nerve gliding exercises and traction combined with flexion-distraction manipulation. Moderate cases benefit from transforaminal epidural steroid injections that deliver anti-inflammatory medication directly to the compressed nerve root. Severe cases with progressive weakness or NCV/EMG evidence of axonal loss are referred to Dr. Dassa for surgical decompression — timing matters because prolonged nerve compression can cause permanent damage.

Documentation That Wins Cases

Radiculopathy is one of the strongest diagnoses in PI litigation because it produces objective, measurable evidence. NCV/EMG results are expressed in numerical values (nerve conduction velocities, amplitudes, latencies) that cannot be faked or exaggerated. MAIC's electrodiagnostic reports correlate these findings with the specific MRI level and the accident mechanism, creating a three-layer evidence chain.

Your MAIC Providers

Radiculopathy patients from Fordham are treated by Dr. Lennart Belok (Neurology/NCV-EMG) and Dr. Benjamin Shekhtman (Pain Management) at our 60,000 sq ft facility at 2522 Hughes Ave, Bronx NY 10458.

Getting Here from Fordham

B, D, and 4 trains stop at Fordham Road station — MAIC at 2522 Hughes Ave is a 7-minute walk east. Fordham residents have the shortest commute to MAIC of any neighborhood — most patients arrive on foot or by the Bx12 crosstown bus.




Clinical Detail

How Radiculopathy Develops After an Accident Near Fordham

Radiculopathy develops when a herniated disc, bony stenosis, or inflammatory swelling compresses a spinal nerve root after trauma. The compressed root produces a specific pattern of pain, numbness, and weakness that follows the nerve's dermatome and myotome distribution — providing a traceable, objective map of the injury.

Accident Patterns in Fordham

Fordham Road is the Bronx's primary commercial corridor and one of NYC's busiest shopping streets. The concentration of bus routes (Bx12 SBS, Bx22, Bx34), delivery trucks, and pedestrian traffic creates a high-density accident environment. The Fordham Road/Jerome Avenue intersection is one of the top 10 most dangerous intersections in the Bronx for pedestrian injuries.

Primary corridors: Fordham Road (E. and W.), Third Avenue, Jerome Avenue at Fordham, Grand Concourse at Fordham, Webster Avenue, Southern Boulevard.

Diagnostic Pathway at MAIC

NCV/EMG electrodiagnostic testing is the gold standard for radiculopathy confirmation. Nerve conduction studies measure signal speed and amplitude along peripheral nerves. Needle EMG detects denervation potentials in muscles supplied by the compressed root. This testing provides objective, measurable evidence that is extremely difficult for defense experts to dispute.

Treatment Protocol

Transforaminal epidural steroid injections deliver anti-inflammatory medication directly to the compressed nerve root. Physical therapy with neural mobilization techniques reduces nerve root adhesions. Neurology management includes neuropathic pain medication when indicated. Surgical decompression is considered when conservative care fails after 6-12 weeks.

Documentation for Your PI Claim

Radiculopathy documented by NCV/EMG is among the strongest objective findings in PI claims. The electrodiagnostic data provides numerical measurements — nerve conduction velocities, distal latencies, and denervation potentials — that directly quantify the severity of nerve damage.

Your Treating Team

MAIC Physicians for Radiculopathy

Board-certified specialists who treat radiculopathy after car accidents. All physicians are experienced in PI documentation and available for deposition.

Getting to MAIC from Fordham

Transit, Driving & Community Context

Detailed directions: MAIC is directly on Fordham Road at Hughes Avenue. B and D trains stop at Fordham Rd station — a 2-minute walk. The 4 train at Fordham-Jerome is 5 minutes away. Bx12 SBS crosstown bus stops at our door.

Why Fordham residents come to MAIC: MAIC is located in Fordham — patients can walk from the subway. No travel time, no transfer. Our facility is the most accessible Article 28 PI center in the Bronx.

Community: Fordham is home to Fordham University and a dense residential population. The neighborhood's heavy foot traffic, commercial activity, and multi-modal transit create diverse injury patterns — from pedestrian knockdowns to bus accidents to delivery truck collisions.


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