From what I gathered and read up on these topics, correct me if im wrong
Tibias:
Pros
Better sleep(lower legs less affected by bed movement)
Less pain(?)
More recommended for externals and LON(lower budget)
Cons:
Lengthening limit lower compared to Femurs(6 compared to 8?)
Tighter stretching
Higher risk of fibula and tibias not aligned completely
Femurs:
Pros
Higher lengthening limit(8cm)
Better recovery rate(?)
Better proportions femurs to tibia ratio
Cons:
Usually additional procedure(IT band release, required)
Considerably more painful
Lengthening around soft tissues area on thigh could make it harder to sleep
More expensive due to only being recommended on internals
Is that more or less accurate?
I agree w/ the above
I'll add something about the sleep:
I'm doing internal femurs now (about 5cm so far) and am getting knee pain waking me up a few times a night. I'm experimenting with various pillow/blanket positions etc to force the knees to be bent to prevent the knee pain/knee tightness that wakes me up.
Any LL veteran out there has any tips for this? I have found that a big pillow under the knee helps somewhat but doesn't remove completely the instances of being woken up by knee pain. I'm experimenting with other positions like lying on back, knees bent, heavy-ish blanket on the feet and other pillows on the side to hold the legs in place in a knees bent position. Also tried putting feet (with knees bent) on my travel roller bag on a pillow which helped at first then I woke up with left knee pain
So I believe (not sure if this is true) that the quads tightening during sleep may contribute to the knee pain and it is good to keep the legs in a knees bent position to decrease this knee pain. I know the nurses often say to put something under your lower leg for circulation but if knee pain is keeping someone awake at night..
"Higher risk of fibula and tibias not aligned completely"
I think Dr. Asssayag also made a list of some other complications that are also more common in tibias but I can't seem to find his post