You described unilateral lengthening (...) We have several diaries of patients
Thanks for the keyword, following some links for your all convenience:
Milko,
Auron,
crimsontide,
yagen,
U only live once,
Four Inch,
Antonio,
aboali1022There's no question that unilateral lengthening will cost more, it's not just a possibility.
For sure unilateral lenghtening will cost more, comparing to bilateral done
in the same clinic. But unilateral with e.g. Dr. Solomin might cost less than bilateral with e.g. Dr. Paley. There are many options to consider, I would rather first decide on the method and then select the doctor.
You're doubling the number of surgeries, physical therapy sessions, hospital stay (...) you'll also double the time away from home during distraction phase
Agree, but at this expense I can continue relatively normal life because of having only one leg affected. By relatively normal life I understand:
- Being able to move across the city (bus, tram, stairs) unsupported;
- Do the shopping, tidy house, take a shower (with crucial areas water-protected);
- Sail, gym, scooter, ping-pong, bow, canoe, golf, etc.;
- Drive an auto-shift car,
- Join parties, meetings, concerts;
- Go to the pub and complain to strangers about my leg broken after unlucky ski accident
If you can afford that, I would instead ask the potential patient to consider bilateral Precice Stryde. Since it's fully weight-bearing, having one good leg is not as vital anymore since the risk of nail breakage is eliminated. Once and done with faster overall recovery and less costly.
Please do not feel offended by what I will write right now, please also consider that I am not a specialist, definitely without any medical background, sharing just my personal opinion. I would also appreciate your criticism.
So...I can't understand why internal nails are so widely preferred on this forum. Two most serious complications:
fat embolism and
knee damage (e.g. after inserting/removal surgeries) seem to be far more frequent in internal techniques.
Personally, under no circumstances will I let anybody touch any of my healthy joints with a scalpel. These are ones of the most precious parts of my body, directly determining the quality of my life, and I will not compromise their safety for any shor-time benefit. Long bones are different, they can undergo much deformation/damage until it will start noticeably affecting my life. Therefore I will consider only external systems, even though the procedure is longer and less convenient.
Am I wrong in this approach?