Hello, Unicorn. I'm very happy to see you posting again. I was starting to worry a little. You share a lot of useful info with us, you could easily not caring and dedicating your time to healing only. You're kind enough to share your experience and give hope and advices to the many others people who share your own great dream. Please, ignore any negative comments. We all know that this operation has risks, being positive and resilients is the only way we can survive it. Self-pitying doesn't solve anything. Because of my non perfect grasp of english, I'm having some difficulties understading the bone lack discussion. Have you had a bone reduction due to your fracture? How it happened? It seem strange the reduction would be so much, to needing a graft.
Hi Annalisa,
Good to hear from you! How are you deciding on your lengthening?
Firstly, I am not doing a bone graft. Guichet is suggesting a marrow injection to stimulate faster growth.
My bone consolidation is slow on my lengthened right leg (he says can take up to 6 months). And I think me being 41 and female have something to do with it.
Sometime before December on my last X-ray, it looked like the bone got resorbed (I didn't know that can happen - but it did - it means whatever little calluses you developed got absorbed back by your body) but my left leg that had the fracture in August and didn't get lengthened, is fully healed.
So it is strange that one leg heals perfectly and the other doesn't. And the one healing perfectly is the fractured one, whereas the perfect one is not healing. Ahhhhhhh! The conundrum but we shall cross one bridge at a time
Guichet's theory is that it could be my bad walking/exercising habit... because one leg is short and one leg is long, I put all my weight on the short one and do not bear weight/use my long leg. Hence, my short left leg formed bones and healed very quickly.
This theory is further proven by the fact that while I was on holiday, I consciously walked much more using my right leg, and my new X-rays show new calluses/bones being formed.
So the conclusion is yes, bearing weight and adding stress to your legs (within safe limits) do promote bone growth and healing
That's why I was so surprised that my vanished bones grew back
)
And there are other factors which can be determined by blood tests (as another patient kindly shared with me) where one could suffer from poor circulation and blood flow issues, which can affect the healing process.
Does this make more sense? Let me know if you guys have questions.