Doctors told a woman in the United Kingdom that he was at risk of developing a rare spinal condition due to a yoga inn that he did years ago, according to SWNS News Agency.
Terillyn Griffith, 44, Lowestoft, Suffolk, showed the first signs of equine cauda syndrome (CES, a dangerous form of spinal nerve damage) in January 2024 when a magnetic resonance imaging revealed discs on the back, causing yoga -induced subsequent injuries.
“I was showing the children of my ex how to put on the standing bridge when my back gave way,” he said about the initial incident in 2021.
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At first, Griffiths “thought nothing”, but then began to experience back pain two weeks later, often feeling that he would “collapse at the waist.”
“It did not help me to work laborious work and I had to bring heavy materials throughout the day,” said Griffiths, who worked in a factory at that time, in Swns.
Terrynn Griffiths, 44, was teaching children how to make a bridge yoga when he first injured in July 2021. (Terrynn Griffiths / Swns)
He pushed the pain for six months until he was reduced, leading it to thinking he had “cured by himself.”
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But the pain reappeared almost two years later in June 2023. “I had a physical week at work and my back went just before I had a horses assembly lesson,” he said.
Griffiths finally went to the doctor in January 2024, when he learned that he had early signs of equine cauda syndrome, which can cause pain, weakness and incontinence, by the Cleveland Clinic.
“CES is traumatic and changes life … it has brought me life.”
Doctors referred the woman to a physiotherapist, but Griffith said “nothing has helped.” It is not eligible for corrective surgery because it has no “red flag symptom” characteristic of the disease.
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During this time, Griffiths was experiencing skill problems in his hands, weakness in his hip and intake zone, he altered the sensation in his region of the saddle and a semi-paralized bladder, according to the SWNS report.
Also “struggle to walk” and is not able to travel more than a single flight of stairs without having pines and needles.

Terillyn Griffiths is no longer able to climb horses or walk because of the painful state. (Terrynn Griffiths / Swns)
After working with the physiotherapist for nine months doing small exercises, Griffiths said that the pain in the back only worsened.
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“CES is traumatic and changes life,” said Griffiths, who is now home.
“It does not seem that many people know a lot, which has made the right treatment more difficult … and now he has taken my life.”
“I feel like there was little hope for me in the future,” he added.

“I have begun to look for the surgical procedure elsewhere, perhaps abroad, to decompress the area,” said Griffiths. (Terrynn Griffiths / Swns)
According to the National Health Service of the United Kingdom, if the condition is not addressed early, it can cause injuries that change their lives.
Griffiths raises funds for private consultations, travel expenses and home support.
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“I have begun to look for the surgical procedure elsewhere, perhaps abroad, to decompress the area,” he said. “But I wish more people to be more aware of the incomplete and partial equine cauda syndrome.”
“Maybe things would have been different for me.”
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