Don't let the doctors blow you off on this. Though most lumps are nothing the only sure way to tell is thru testing (MRI or CAT Scan) and perhaps a biopsy. I had a very similar thing happen to me. I was being transfered when I found a small lump in my left thigh, no pain, nothing. Just a lump. The doctor felt of it, did an ultrasound and said when I got relocated to have it biopsied, but don't worry he tells me because it's almost always nothing. When I got relocated I had the procedure done as an out-patient. The first pathologist said benign, but the second opinon came back positive as a soft tissue sarcoma. The third opinon also came back positive (come to find out the one I had is very hard to identify). This is not a fast growing tumor but a hard one to get rid of (it likes to reoccur in the same area). Ten-fifteen years ago they would have amputated my leg. What they did for me was to take the whole thigh muscle out and fry my leg with radiation from the knee to the groin. The point is with the pain your having be more aggressive in having it looked at properly. The lump even if it's nothing could be pressing on nerves which could be causing the pain and not a spinal problem. Best of luck in finding out what it is.
Tony
[This message has been edited by TonyC001 (edited 05-29-2001).]
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