The nerves that carry messages to and from your legs come from your low back. By checking your muscle strength, your deep tendon reflexes, and your sensation (feeling), your doctor can tell whether there is pressure on a nerve root coming from your spinal column. He or she can also tell which nerve root is involved.
Muscle strength
Muscle strength tests can detect true muscle weakness, which is one sign of pressure on a nerve root. (Sometimes leg weakness is actually due to pain, not pressure on a nerve.) Most people who have herniated discs that cause symptoms also have some nerve root compression.
Specific muscles receive impulses from specific nerves, so finding out which muscles are weak shows your doctor where nerve roots are being compressed.
See a picture of the lumbosacral region, from which nerve root compression usually originates.
Muscle strength tests include:
Sensory testing
Just as your muscles receive signals through certain nerves, other nerves carry signals back to your spinal cord from specific sections of your skin and other tissues. Testing your sense of feeling helps your doctor find out what nerve root may be compressed.
Your sense of feeling may be tested in several ways. Your doctor will probably ask you to close your eyes during this testing, because it's easy to imagine the feeling if you can see the test being done. Testing may include touching your skin lightly with a cotton ball or pricking your skin lightly with a pin.
| Area of skin | Nerve level |
|---|---|
| The front of your thigh | L1, L2, L3 |
| The inside of your lower leg, from the knee to the inner ankle and arch | L4 |
| The top of your foot and toes | L5 |
| The outside of your ankle and foot | S1 |
Deep tendon reflexes
Your deep tendons are those that attach the deep muscles (the muscles lying next to your bones) to the bones themselves. To test your deep tendon reflexes, your doctor will use a rubber hammer to tap firmly on the tendon. If certain reflexes are decreased or absent, it will show what nerve might be compressed. Not all nerve roots have a deep tendon reflex associated with them.
| By | Healthwise Staff |
|---|---|
| Primary Medical Reviewer | William M. Green, MD - Emergency Medicine |
| Specialist Medical Reviewer | Robert B. Keller, MD - Orthopedics |
| Last Revised | February 3, 2010 |
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Related InformationLast Revised: February 3, 2010
Author: Healthwise Staff
Medical Review: William M. Green, MD - Emergency Medicine & Robert B. Keller, MD - Orthopedics
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