Quote from: Future Skycraper on May 08, 2021, 07:17:29 PMWell, firstly, thank you for writing it all down. I really appreciate it!
I will read it, I'm reading the barcelona one now (He seems to be having a hard recover at walking). Yes, the way you explained seems to be tougher, it's better to do what you said, get femur at max and wait.
Yeah, I think that too. But I will only do LL with stryde, cause of recovering time and time to walk normaly.
Okay, I won't, knowing the shoe lift life hack is awesome. But I do worry about the biomechanics after only femur. (I will look at those patients too for sure). I don't really care about armspan, long legs are beautiful and used at superheroes. Iwill search about doing bileteral femur first, I'm open with that option for sure. (Yeah, we want the maximum as possible with no permanent complications and weird look)
Yes, and with a different doc if you want right?
Wht do you mean with stable axis? (I will ask one later!)
Thank you very much, I really appreciate your response!
You are welcome
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Yes STRYDE is the best device but unfortunately it is not available now. All alternatives come with up and downsides (precise is not weight bearing, mechanical nails are usually more painfull, externals are uncomfortable create more scars and risk infections etc)
If you can wait until next year I think it is worth waiting!
I sincerely think proportions are overrated. Even those who do a lot of lengthening (for example look at the user @jfk - he did 2 LLs and got to 16.5cm) end up looking amazing. Safety is what matters though, yes!
I think biomechanics are not much affected tbh. Unless you are an athlete or bodybuilding doing squads etc it will not make too much of a difference. Even when it does, you will only be impaired for the year gap until you get the tibia LL. Think about it that way, people who do cross lengthening (one femur and one tibia on the other side at the same time) have a much worse odd look until they get the second surgery.. but when they do it's all fine again.
I mean the mechanical axis*. Basically the alignement of the bones and how the pressure/force is distributed on the knee. If it is screwed (with internals it rather happens on the tibia) you will get arthritis due to one side of the knee being pressured way more. If it is aligned properly, you should be fine. Some argue there could be long term risks but this is debatable. Logically, being an athlete or being obese is a much higher risk for that than just a few extra inches on your bones. At least this is my opinion (and most Doctors will say that if done properly, there really shouldn't be any long term problems).