well I was actually researching a completely separate issue when I came across this.
but it would appear that the warnings I gave you gys for lengthening both the tibia and femur on 1 leg(apart from my world class doctor) are also backed up by dr paley in writing.
lets go back to my statements.
I said you will not be able to lengthen both segments at the same time because of the soft tissue limitation.
now for dr paley.
Misc. on quadrilateral lengthening.
Chances are, with quadrilateral limb lengthening, you will not be able to lengthen as much as you'd like. The reason is the intense strain your soft tissue is going under simultaneously, and for this reason, you will only be able to lengthen at max 10 cm.
in case anyone doesn't understand when you stretch 1 segment(ie tibia or femur) in the leg both segments are affected. when you do surgery on both segments at the same time you compound the soft tissue strain.
so now that it has been cleared up in writing by dr paley. all people who disagreed with me kindly jump off a large bridge into a small pool of water. so 10cm............... as a max according to dr paley.
another issue I brought up. when you lengthen both segments at the same time you loose range of motion and so you cant stretch the tibia soft tissue. this will happen to different people to different degrees. my opinion was that if you loose your range of motion in your femur then your ballerina will skyrocket.
now for dr paley......... he agrees. and states that you will have to stop lengthening entirely if this happens. so please forgive me people for warning you. I really cant believe you all couldn't work this out. its really simple.
again for lengthening both femur and tibia at the same time:
and we will be monitoring your rate of progress to see which segments need adjustments based on the complications you're incurring. ROM is key, and if your ROM is affected, we'll have to act accordingly by reducing your lengthening (for some patients, we have stopped lengthening entirely).
so forgive me guys because I was smart enough to know that there are serious restrictions to this kind of surgery due to soft tissue restrictions. doing tibia and femur on the same leg at the same time has restrictions, paley believes the limit max is 10 cm, and there is a serious issue with range of motion being lost which could result in you to stop lengthening entirely.
in laymen's terms if people cant visualize it:
ps guys if you cant straighten your leg because of femur range of motion issues, then you can not even attempt to stretch you ballerina foot.
and if you cant do any stretching exercise's then you will develop serious issues that will take a long time to resolve. so much so to the point where paley has stopped his patients from continuing to lengthen entirely.
don't get angry at me. im just the messenger. this is paleys opinion. but there are many doctors who think lengthening 1 leg at a time has restrictions and other issues.
my recommendation is if you use this doctor, just get both femurs done at the same time, and to avoid fat embolism then have a 4 week gap in between surgeries which is how all other doctors seem to avoid fat embolism.