Still here, still laying around. I saw the dr. Wednesday and got the Bigfoot cast off and a more normal cast applied. The effects of following the bedrest/elevation orders are immediately obvious as there is almost no swelling or bruising. The incision is pretty big and I'll have quite a scar but who cares? It beats being braced and certainly beats repeated injuy. The dr. seemed pleased. I liked him this time. It appears he likes to do surgery. He doesn't like to talk about a theoretical surgery but he'll happily discuss once he got to cut. They did a lot of clean-up in there, tightened ligaments and tendons and sewed it all back up. He said 8 weeks until I can start putting weight down. That's better than 12 which is what he told my mom Friday. I'm in my first cast now and that comes off in 2 weeks for stitches to come out and then I get another one.
I can see now why he does things differently. Usually the bigfoot dressing is on 2-2.5 weeks and then is removed, stitches are removed and the cast is put on for the rest of the time. My doctor is more tightly controlling how much movement I get by never letting a cast get looser from decreased swelling. The cast is even done differently than a usual ankle cast. It goes completely over my toes, which has made doing stairs really hard and scary (I call it my flipper) and it is contoured so that there is an arch to my foot and around the foot it is form-fitting. It is much bigger in the ankle where I have a lot more padding over the incisions (2 on top of my foot and the big one on the outside of my ankle) and then I have additional padding on my heel because I have 2 stage I pressure sores there. I apparently was propping my heel on things and didn't know it because you can't feel it through the Bigfoot thing (or the flipper either) and so I have to be careful about that now too. Friday, June 20, 2014
Laying around
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2 comments:
Much good news. Thanks for posting.
Tonight I went to my granddaughter's elementary school graduation (5th grade). Her little brother is three years younger. He sat beside her and cried and cried about her moving on to middle school. She held his hand. He's really tenderhearted. I see the seeds of this type of relationship in the news you shared about your precious nieces.
I guess it's time for Anne to start grappling with the concept that adults have to sometimes say "I don't know." What a milestone.
You're a precious Auntie Jen and you're mending under the care of another very wise doctor.
I'm thanking God.
xo M
Glad to hear there is nothing much to post - sometimes no news really is good news! Hope the recovery continues to go smoothly!!
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