Thank you for taking time to educate others.
1. When did you get your tibias done and how long did you wait before you went to your femurs?
2. Which doctor/clinic did you surgery?
3. Did you have an initial sit down appointment before the surgery? If so, what was the time difference between the sit down and the surgery?
4. How much pain were you immediately after the surgery? How long did you take anticoagulants, pain medication and antibiotics?
5. How much physical rehab did you attend? Did you do exercise before your surgeries?
6. Did you see other limb lengthening patience during your stay? If so, what were their experiences?
1. I had my tibias done throughout COVID. I has a gastroc recession which helped me reach 8cm (alongside the STRYDE nail). I did my femurs after two years but it would have been right after if my personal life circumstances had been different.
2. Rozbruch
3. Yes. Depends on the clinic
4. Immediately after surgery, pain is minimal due to MASSIVE amounts of painkillers. Pain sets in 2-3 days after. Pain is multifaceted. You have bowel issues due to oxycodone, muscle soreness, surgery incision pain in the first 1-2 weeks. Then you have lengthening pain kick in right after so the pain never stops. You need strongest pain killers in the first 2-4 weeks after which 2x 500mg tylenol can do the trick every 4-6 hours. Stretching helps with pain
5. Stretch, stretch, stretch! It hurts but you have to stretch. The key is to love the pain in a weird way and breath.
6. I did but nobody wanted to talk about the surgery. Limb lengthening is a lonely process. You don't tell most people about it either because they'll judge you for it.