Patient Health Report: Mrs. B. E.
Date of Visit: January 9, 2026
Introduction
Upon visiting Mrs. B. Eduok on January 9, 2026, it was immediately clear that she is facing a
serious, life-threatening health crisis. She is experiencing severe pain,
progressive weakness, and loss of control over basic body functions, leaving her daily life profoundly impacted.
Urgent, emergency medical attention is required to prevent irreversible nerve damage
or total systemic collapse.
Current Health Conditions & Symptoms
- Persistent left-sided head pain with left ear pain and inner left teeth pain
- Spinal pain with noticeable swelling in the mid-back
- Strong tightening/shrinking pain extending from upper to mid-spine
- Sharp, shooting pain from the waist radiating down both legs
- Progressive weakness of both legs preceded by pain; numbness in the feet
- Weakness and mild pain in both shoulders
- Numbness of the fingers
- Pain around the diaphragm / upper abdominal area (ulcer-like)
- Urinary incontinence (loss of bladder control)
- Blood sugar imbalance (unknown if high or low)
- Severely elevated blood pressure: 209/119 mmHg
- Heart rate: 87 bpm
Functional Impact
- Reduced limb strength
- Sensory loss in hands and feet
- Difficulty controlling urination
- Persistent, debilitating pain affecting daily activities
Possible Causes (Non-Diagnostic)
Neurological / Spine-Related
- Spinal cord compression (disc herniation, tumor, infection, inflammation)
- Cervical or thoracic myelopathy
- Severe nerve root compression (radiculopathy)
- Degenerative spine disease with nerve involvement
- Spinal inflammation or swelling
Vascular / Blood Pressure-Related
- Hypertensive emergency affecting brain or spinal circulation
- Reduced blood flow to nerves due to severe hypertension
Metabolic
- Diabetic neuropathy (if blood sugar is uncontrolled)
- Electrolyte imbalance affecting nerve function
Head & Facial Pain
- Trigeminal nerve irritation
- Referred pain from dental or ear pathology
- Vascular headache related to hypertension
Urinary Symptoms
- Neurogenic bladder due to spinal or nerve involvement
- Pressure or injury affecting bladder control pathways
Systemic / Other
- Inflammatory or autoimmune neurological condition
- Infection involving spine or nervous system
Simple Family Explanation & First Aid Priority
This condition is extremely urgent.
Immediate attention must be given to:
- Rapidly lowering her blood pressure
- Calming spinal swelling
- Controlling pain
- Protecting nerves and bladder function
Hospital drug treatment is first aid and life-saving, and must be prioritized immediately.
Herbs and natural remedies can only be introduced after stabilization to support
permanent recovery and restoration. Starting herbs too early may cause permanent harm.
Hospital Drug Schedule (Example)
For a 53-Year-Old Woman with Suspected Spinal Compression & Severe Hypertension
| Time | Drug / Class | Purpose | Notes / Monitoring |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6:00 AM | Amlodipine (Calcium-channel blocker) | Lower blood pressure | Take with water; monitor BP |
| 6:00 AM | Paracetamol | General pain relief | Repeat every 6–8 hours as needed |
| 8:00 AM | Gabapentin | Neuropathic pain | Monitor drowsiness; take with food |
| 12:00 PM | Lisinopril (ACE inhibitor) | Blood pressure control | Monitor kidney function & potassium |
| 2:00 PM | Muscle relaxant (Baclofen or Diazepam) | Muscle spasm | Watch for drowsiness / low BP |
| 6:00 PM | Paracetamol (repeat if needed) | Pain relief | Monitor liver with prolonged use |
| 8:00 PM | Gabapentin (repeat dose) | Nerve pain | Adjust based on tolerance & doctor advice |
| Before Bedtime | Optional steroid (Methylprednisolone) | Reduce spinal swelling | Monitor blood sugar & BP |
Note: Blood sugar levels must be confirmed before management.
Recommendations / Next Steps
- Emergency hospital care: Immediate admission for stabilization
- Rapid blood pressure control and spinal imaging (MRI/CT)
- Neurological monitoring: Strength, sensation, bladder function
- Pain and spasm management as outlined above
- Herbal therapy only after full stabilization and under supervision
Prognosis
If the above steps are adopted immediately, this beautiful lady has a strong chance for
permanent health restoration. Delay in treatment can lead to
irreversible nerve damage and systemic collapse.

