Hello fellow forum members,
I have just moved over to MICs; Dr Monegal was kind enough to chauffeur me and another one of his patients over to the MIC's. The facility here is very nice, much nicer than I expected. Everyone has been very friendly and helpful at MICs.
I am pretty excited that I was able to begin lengthening today and I remain confident that things will continue to progress smoothly. Surprisingly, at no time did I ever feel anything that I would classify as pain thus far during this procedure, at least while resting my leg. I did have some shooting pain when I moved my leg in order to get it positioned to stand up, it seems the lateral movements were the hardest. I learned to use my good leg to assist the other leg with lateral movements, once that technique dawned on me the pain was gone. In the beginning, there was also a bit of tolerable pain surrounding my knee cap when bending the leg more that 60 degrees or so.
You are probably all familiar with the stretching machine that is used by the PT's on a daily basis. I was chugging along daily, building from 80-85-90-95-100 degrees, with the same PT. Then on Sunday walks in "Carlos the Slayer" (PT by profession). Carols is a long bearded chap with a seemingly very calm disposition. I got the feeling that there is not much that alarms or gets to Carlos. Carlos enter my room, introduced himself and then casually says, "You have been doing 100, lets try 110 degrees" - and were off to the races. The previous PT was moving me up in 5 degree increments so I was not sure what to expect with a 10 degree increase all at once. Although I was up to it, I can't say that it did not hurt the first 10 repetitions, it did indeed. In fact, the first five felt like my knee cap was about to explode. However, I'm glad I did not complain or ask to tone it down a notch; after the first 10 reps the pain did smooth out and I was actually looking forward to the upcoming rep. I wish Carlos would have graced my room with his presence earlier in my stay; I think the intense stretching really helps. I wish I could have taken that machine and Carlos the Slayer with me to the MICs.
Although far from a pro, I can get around on crutches; I made a short jaunt to the Shop down the street to grab a bottle of Cola and napkins; I've been craving a Coke since my second day at the clinic. Surprisingly the MICs provides everything your need but there was no starter package with things like a few napkins, condiments etc. (but there was a bowl of fruit that was a pleasant surprise) - I just now go up to check to see if there was any toilet paper as I had forgotten to check, luckily either the MIC's or the last occupant left a few rolls so I am fully stocked on that item.
I have meet a few fellow LLer's since starting the procedure. A young man at the clinic that very much impressed me with his control and wisdom. I believe he was only lengthening 4cm, something that seems to be rarely done; many (me included) want as much bang for their investment as they can tolerate. This young man has inspired me to do some very hard thinking as I lengthen to determine where to stop the process.
The second person I met was from a neighboring country and was on his second limb. He was the other patient that Dr. Monegal shuttled over to MICs today. He seemed to be doing fabulous, he looked just as tall as Dr. Monegal to me (something I'm pretty sure is a foul in Dr. Monegal's rule book) - he also spoke better English than me which kind of pissed me off
As i walked into the MICs, I met a very beautiful and friendly young lady. I learned quickly that she happened to be a forum member who I consider to be the most influential third party in helping me select my surgeon. This influence was merely based on her public posts throughout the forum.
As mentioned, I am feeling very confident but continue to understand the risk that I have accepted with this procedure. So far, I think I have been slightly lucky with how well things seem to have gone; however, I have nothing but kudos for Dr. Monegal thus far.
We'll time to get back to work......unfortunately, I still need to work for my living while here in Barcelona.
Cheers everyone!