How would it trigger bone cancer? You sound like the guy who said having a foley can give you erectile dysfunction. Did you read that somewhere because that is a big statement to make.
The blood vessels is an interesting question though, but it sounds like the new blood vessels created/stretched work jsut as well as any other boood vessels in the body.
Regarding the bone cancer, I just read it somewhere on older threads and just thought it could be a possibility since your legs are broken purposely and a lot of metals go through them.
What do you mean by the new blood vessels created/stretched work just as well as any other blood vessels in the body? I suppose the other blood vessels are not unnaturally stretched according to the artificial bones lengthen?
idk how LL would cause bone cancer.
millions of people get fractures/break their legs every year and get nails or external fixators installed. Not to mention the people who get LL for leg length discrepancies.
and no it should not cause any circulatory problems. Stay healthy, work out, eat a good diet, don't smoke and you should not have any worries when it comes to circulatory problems. LL should not cause these problems.
when undergoing LL in the US (external or internal), these are the three main complications you need to watch out for-
1. Fat Embolism Syndrome
2. DVT leading to pulmonary embolism
3. Compartment syndrome.
There are things you can do to limit these complications by a lot. I suggest you to read up on them.
I was just wondering. I think fractures are different from bones being cut and separated like that. And for leg lengthening discrepancy, it's mostly unilateral. But it's good to know if none of them got bone cancer.
And yeah, I've done some research on the other complications you mention. Only not so clear on CECS
MirinHeight is a great contributor to these forums, and he has done all or most of the research needed on CLL. He's not like the 5'10/177~178cm teenagers who read 6 feet memes online, register here, and decide to use life/college savings to go get the surgery, without understanding much about it, with surgeons like Barinov or Sringari. He understands the risks, and is taking his time to do it right. He's not doing it because he feels lacks height to be with women (which he doesn't at his height, and he has already stated he has a GF). It's his personal choice to make. He's fully informed about all of this. We may not do it if we had his height, but it's his life.
@On-topic: Distraction osteogenesis through the Ilizarov apparatus has been practiced since the 60s. Cosmetic DO/CLL is a much newer practice. But people like Catagni treated "constitutionally short men" (I believe men under 165cm/5'5) through LL since at least the 70s. Shevtsov and Solomin also have been in it for a long time. We'd have to rely on a follow-up study published by them to know if CLL has an impact on relative mortality.
The most high-profile case of LL died at 60.
But sources make no mention of the cause - at least, as far as I've searched. They just mention a "prolonged illness". Doesn't sound like something vascular related.
https://www.nytimes.com/2003/01/28/sports/valery-brumel-is-dead-at-60-russian-set-high-jump-marks.html
Yeah I saw that athlete you mentioned before. It probably has nothing to do with LL. He had a serious accident, not just bones lenthened.