No I didn't take anything personally. There's life outside of internet anonymity. On the web when no one sees anyone's face, It's just fun to respond to mocking or sarcasm by another sarcasm don't you think?
About nail type, I saw that OP used the word "nail" so I assumed internal nails. "In general", I don't recommend weight bearing nail because while being at Paley's, I informally collected knowledge that on average, stryde patients took longer to have their nails removed post surgery. Another patient (whom I met in-person) told me of a LL friend who broke both her bone & the stryde nail at 1+ year after consolidation, while descending stairs and fell. These 2 facts supplement each other. When the nail is strong, it sustains more weight bearing. As a result, the new bones don't "compress" as much, hence taking longer to harden.
Walking unaided with a stryde nail looks - honestly - quite funny at 6+ mo post surgery. You can see that from former LLer's diaries. So OP could be noticed by either suddenly looking taller or by walking with a weird posture - which is what s/he wants to avoid. Thus I answer 10mo without thinking too much.
In all, my point is, LL is an experience. Take the time to rest, live slower, give your precious body abundant time to heal. My point is not about arguing 10mo vs 6mo or weight bearing vs non-bearing nails.
Id love to discuss this a bit more
as far as i understand from the scientific literature an intramedullary nail is a load sharing device, and not a load bearing such as plate fixation, that means that any nail would share the load with the bone
i just dont understand how would precice would be superior to stryde(besides the osteolysis of course), when stryde allowed patients to throw the crutches a month earlier than precice
id argue that once normal every day locomotion is restored it would possibly take longer for a stryde nail to calcify the regenerate(full return to normal bone consistency would take on average 9-12 months), depending on diet and exercise, however the difference is miniscule and not clinically significant when it comes to violent fractures such as stairs falling
regarding the girl who broke her leg, sounds like a total horror story, but in reality nail or no nail falling on stairs is almost certain to bring a variety of fractures-broken wrist, broken ankle, broken leg. i have fallen down stairs when i was 9 years old and broke my right ankle.
id love to see that xray after she fell though, that would be interesting to see all the damage from a medical standpoint
regarding walking normally, wouldnt you agree that this is solely to do with soft tissue recovery? perhaps you were seeing the stryde patients doing the zombie walk because they threw the crutches earlier and now can brute force through the tightness with every day movement
the horror freak walk goes away rather quickly
thoughts?