Hey body builder.
Is there a place to read about your experience? Meaning tibia lengthening and everything.
If no, could u share in few words the details of your lengthening?
And about ATL. You seem the be against it, do u could have an alternative way to repair ballerina foot u know in hindsight?
Which method of ATL you have done?
Thanks
In the old forum I had a diary with my LL surgery and atl which followed some months after. I had at lengthening with z plasty method.
The same method my new dr used for tendon shortening which I did almost 3 months before.
The only real solution to bf is to not let it become massive and you can do it with slow (0.66mm per day max) and not more than your body tolerates (usually less than 6.5 cm in tibias)lengthening.
But even if you have massive bf like I did, the solution is walking, pt and much stretching.
In almost all cases after some months your heels will touch the ground and even if not, trust me it is better to have 2-3cm bf and wear shoes with 2-3cm lifts to walk completely normal than walking with a foot without bf but weak and unstable that doesn't let you do almost nothing, except walking and not in all cases, normally.
When I have the final results of at shortening, in about 9 months from now, I'll write about this surgery and how much it works.
Until now my left leg is way better than before, my right is a little better (it was already better than my left one but still it may wasn't shorten as much as it should, I'll see it better in the next months) and generally I trully believe that if the dr gives again the right tendon length (the one tendons had before atl) then the problems of atl are almost completely irreversible.
But it is not easy to measure the exact length the tendon had and that's why this surgery is tricky. Also, it needs a long rehabilitation, I needed more than 2 months to walk with shoes and drive again which is not so little.
Anyway, atl is something noone should do as the result is much more devastating than having bf.
At shortening helps a lot from what I see but it is not something easy as maybe even after it the tendon remains longer than it should, it has a long rehabilitation time and very few doctors do it.
I am maybe the first patient in the world that did at shortening after atl (and not some tendon elongation that happened after at rupture).
So don't let any moron dr mess with your tendons. Things are much more hard and risky than lengthening some bones.