MEDICAL DISCLAIMER: The information provided on OrthoLength Pro is for educational purposes only and does not substitute for professional medical advice. Always consult with a qualified orthopedic surgeon.
Posted on Aug 11, 2018, 9:20 pm
#1041

Quote from: Kotiki on August 10, 2018, 11:54:57 AMI apologize if this question has been answered - I may have missed it as I skimmed over the thread. When one of the nails ran away to 10 cm, or better still, while that nail was running away and had passed the safe mark of 5-6 cm, WHY didn't Guichet perform an emergency surgery, take out the faulty nail, shortened the bone to the length originally planned and inserted a trauma nail?


Hi Kotiki,

No worries, there're a lot of pages to parse through as it was written contemporaneously (and I'm verbose) without the 20/20 hindsight I wished I had.  So here's the brief version with a summary timeline :

Jul'16 - 1st surgery (London)
Aug'16 - Left leg broke due to eggshell fracture of 1st surgery
Sep'16 - 2nd surgery (London) to nail g-nail back on the left femur
Sep'16 - Right leg lengthening ended at ~7cm
Dec'16 - Discovery that right leg is non-union
Apr'17 - 3rd surgery (Milan) to start lengthening left leg
Jun'17 - Discovery that the right leg has run away to ~9.7cm
Jun'18 - 4th surgery (NHS London) to bone graft my right leg non-union (left leg fully fused with lengthening at my own pace of 0.3-0.5mm per day only, and I waited 1 week post osteotomy before starting to lengthen)

https://www.instagram.com/unicorn_gets_taller

***************************************

Guichet had stopped my right leg lengthening at 7cm.  So I reached that height around end Sep'16 (about 65 days from 1st surgery).  However, when my left femur broke, my pelvis started tilting very badly (see pic below) to compensate for the crushed 0cm on my left leg and a progressively longer and longer right leg.

So, Guichet sent me to see his chiropractor and during one of those sessions, she accidentally clicked me and it hurt like hell. After that, everytime I bend my legs to sit or put my knees together or when I lie sideways to sleep, clicks would happen on its own.  I wrote Guichet asap and sent him a photo of a sitting position whereby, clicks would just happen.  He said it was not possible with the g-nail.  It is like when he brushed me off, declaring that it wasn't possible for my left leg to be broken from his eggshell fracture, and instead, diagnosed my 5-day excruciating pain as fast bone consolidation.  He even had me take meds to slow down fusing (!).

At first, I was psyched that these accidental clicks will give me a little bit more height than what I finished at, like maybe 2mm more.  But the clicking continued up to this May'18 before I had my right leg bone graft with the NHS.  I wear a full length right leg brace to sleep so that I don't click by accident especially when lying in a fetal position.

That said, we were all under the impression that my right leg was lengthened to 7cm-ish.  However, I was admitted to the Emergency Room because my skin started staining red (erythema) and my wounds sites from my 3rd Milan surgery of Apr'17 started oozing pus.  I had shown Guichet the inflammed wound sites at his office, and he said it was normal following a major surgery but I went anyway to A&E to double check.  When the head of A&E at Chelsea Westminster Hospital saw the weeping wound sites, he FREAKED, because it could potentially lead to infection of the nail and bone.  So they hospitalized me asap, I was given xrays, blood tests and IV antibiotics overnight.

Anyway, when the A&E head saw me the next day, he showed me on the screen that I wasn't 7cm on my right leg but more like 10cm.  I was quite surprised as I didn't think it could runaway that much.  I kept telling him his measuring systems were wrong.  I mean every 15 clicks = 1mm, hence, to achieve about 2.7cm (270mm) more, that'd entail about 400 clicks.  The math just doesn't add up.

That said, when I had my (last) consultation with Guichet, I told him about the hospital's findings and he measured my xrays and said, yes it actually is closer to 10cm now.  I was quite disappointed because I really thought my wellbeing and lengthening procedure were being closely monitored, especially for the steep price and sterling hospital reputation (HCA Group is the largest hospital group in the world and publicly quoted on the NYSE at a $36BN market cap - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hospital_Corporation_of_America) which gave me a (false) sense of security and blind trust.

Guichet has since not seen me, and I had thankfully met another Guichet non-union victim who kindly persuaded his NHS doc to take me on.  Since then, Guichet's notes had been transferred over to the NHS and to my utter devastation, Guichet added in his notes that he warned me not to lengthen to 10cm but I had ignored him and went ahead in secret.  This accusation shattered me because after so much trauma, suffering, loss of livelihood/self worth etc, the last thing I expected was for my own doctor to hurl me under the bus to exonerate himself.  This emotional betrayal is not the kind of pain that I can easily relieve with morphine.

To move on, I started doubting myself because Guichet maintained that his nails can never run away.  But thank goodness, one other patient kindly wrote me and shared that she too had non-union and her nail ran away as well.  In her case, the other leg had fused and so she actually needed to go through a leg shortening surgery to rematch both legs UNICORN - Dr. Guichet Internal Femurs 8cm - Summer 2016  Same thing, when Guichet maintains that his nails are fully weight bearing and never break, the person who got operated 2 days after me in Jul'16 suffered a complete nail breakage through the femur bone in May'18 - two years on and this LLer was beyond consoling.  And I'm sure, if asked, Guichet would blame us.  Period.

Since then, I've had more people write me about ISKD nails and how they can easily run away after a few months of clicking (if non-union) because it cannot stop without the tension from bone consolidation/calluses nor designed to reverse.  So I am not crazy after all.  All this has done quite a serious number to my head because I lost so much self confidence and doubted myself in everything I endeavoured.

I sank so deep that some days, I really believe I don't deserve help, because I brought this upon myself.  That I'm even wasting precious NHS resources because of my reckless vanity.  Everytime I've a physio, psychologist, psychiatric and/or orthopedic appointment at the NHS, I somehow feel ashamed for stealing the slot of more deserving patients.

At the end of the day, what cuts me deepest ironically enough is... my own doctor could so nonchalantly whip up medical notes to exculpate himself first.  It's gonna take me a little while longer to regain my confidence.  I feel like I lost a lot more than physical limbs, I lost a big part of my heart.  The warm part that sees the best in people and believes in herself.  Instead, I find myself hardened, cynical and mentally scarred.  I'm learning to forgive myself everyday, it is the first step of my emotional healing.

SEVERE LEG LENGTH DISCREPANCY AND LATERAL PELVIS TILT
UNICORN - Dr. Guichet Internal Femurs 8cm - Summer 2016

IMAGING (~curved spine, extreme pelvis tilt to compensate for the leg length discrepancy)
UNICORN - Dr. Guichet Internal Femurs 8cm - Summer 2016

ONE WOUND SITE
UNICORN - Dr. Guichet Internal Femurs 8cm - Summer 2016

HOSPITALIZED
UNICORN - Dr. Guichet Internal Femurs 8cm - Summer 2016


Like (0)
Posted on Aug 11, 2018, 10:03 pm
#1042

Wow, just wow.

Lucky, we have internet and the surgeons CAN be punished for  ty attitude towards complications. It sounds like this guy is still mentally stuck in the pre-internet era when a surgeon could get away with anything without risking their reputation.

Every surgeon will have complications. It's how they respond to them that matters.

Maybe, if you take him to court it will give you a closure?

Like (0)
Posted on Aug 11, 2018, 10:13 pm
#1043

These doctors are psycopaths. Be very careful. Thank God NHS is there for you. Other people can't afford any doctor. Take care

Like (0)
Posted on Aug 15, 2018, 10:35 pm
#1044

Hey everyone,

Just wanted to give you a little update since it might happen to anyone healing from LL.

Last Tuesday, while I was preparing to go to sleep, my right leg started getting achy and throbbing.  By the time I got myself into bed around 1am, I could barely move without triggering a stabbing pain the way a fresh fracture feels.  I was convinced my right leg fractured or the nail broke like it did to my other LL classmate.

I could not move my right leg because the moment the 'fracture/bone graft' area shifted 1cm, it erupted in 9/10 searing pain.  But since it was already 1AM, all I wanted to do was sleep it off and deal with it tomorrow.  But the pain persisted as I could NOT move AT ALL without incurring the wrath of my right femur.  Finally, I gave up!

I had to do something, get to my morphine and maybe icepack.  But I couldn't even stand or crutch or move without paralyzing torment.  So I removed the duvet cover from my comforter very very slowly, rolled myself like a springroll on it so that both my legs become a makeshift splint (egyptian mummy style) to ensure minimal movement.  Then I threw a pillow on the floor and using my triceps and abs (they're so strong after these 2 years), I slowly slid myself down ass first with my legs straight in front of me resting on the pillow while it glided forward.

The moment I touched the floor, I slowly rolled myself to my tummy and using the pillow under my femur as buffer, I crawled on my stomach using my elbows to propel myself forward (like army bootcamp) from my bedroom to my kitchen to get icepacks and then livingroom to get morphine.  I laid on the floor afterwards, completely out of breadth, depleted of energy and waited impatiently for the excruciating pain to recede.

After about 45 mins, nothing improved and I started to feel the room spining and nauseous.  I told myself I had better call the paramedics but my phone was in the bedroom (!).  So I held my breadth and forged forward with every last ounce of strength I have left while biting down not to quit from the merciless pain.  By the time I dialed 911 or 999 or whatever number (I learnt from CSI even though this is London), I could barely speak anymore.  I was panting hard, in agonizing pain, sobbing uncontrollably, heart racing, head numb/spinning, and I was very tempted to shut my eyes just to drift off.

Anyway, the ambulance came within like 5 minutes (there's a hospital next to my home) BUT I had no more willpower to open the door for them.  So I had to get them to pry it open for me.  My blood pressure plummeted to 60 to 65, I was barely coherent, mumbling important facts only and they hooked me up to nitrous oxide (laughing gas) which didn't live up to its name, it didn't make me laugh at all BUT it did calm me down and slowed down my breathing and palpitations.

They had to haul me from the floor onto a wheelchair coz a stretcher cldn't fit in my elevator and I live on the 7th floor.  I screeched so much as they lifted me in one swift motion onto the wheelchair that I think dogs heard me ultrasonically.  As they wheeled me, even the bump over the threshold of my door caused such an electric jolt, I woke several neighbours too.

Once we got downstairs, my building entrance has about 6 stairs and thank goodness, to the kindness of these paramedics, they carefully balanced my wheelchair horizontally on their shoulders (kinda like in a jewish wedding but without the festivity and dancing) so that I won't trundle down each step with those klunky wheels.  Even then, every movement including the final roll up onto the ambulance ram and one more body transfer from chair to bed proved too much for me to handle and I fainted.  They quickly hooked me up to an IV paracetamol painkiller, pumped oxygen and asked me to try calm myself as they were afraid with my 60 blood pressure, I would go into shock and then organs would start shutting down.

They wanted to drive me to the closest hospital that had an orthopedist on night duty but I promised them I would withstand the pain if they could drive 20 minutes to Kings College Hospital because my docs are there and so are my medical files etc.

Long story short, we made it, got to the hospital, impeccable professional service, got wheeled straight into mobile xrays where I just lay in my A&E trolley bed while they moved the modern machines around my body.  Got results asap and NO FRACTURE but rather, it looked like calluses started forming from my DBX bone graft and they could see some jagged edges.  Got tested for bloods, more IV drips of paracetamol and fluids.  I had to stay overnight until my regular doc sees me the next day.  By then it was 6AM, and my pain was managed well at 2/10 level.  I couldn't feel a thing but I was dead tired.

I zonked out for god knows how long and woke up to MY usual orthopedist doc staring down at me with her large unblinking eyeballs (mentally, I jumped out of my skin in sheer terror).  I explained the whole story, she was not really that sympathetic because I think she thought I was being melodramatic.  Trust me, I didn't want to call the ambulance either for a stupid leg pain but it got so unbearable, I was all alone, I couldn't even help myself, everyone's asleep and I even asked the paramedics if I was wasting their time with something so trifle.  It wasn't a gunshot wound, stroke or heart attack the way you see it on tv.

Anyway, I had to stay another night coz the bloods came back weird.  My white cell counts were high and inflammation indicators from my bloods were completely off the charts.  My doc pored through my xrays closer to see if there was perhaps a hairline fracture or nail breakage that they had missed.  But so far, nothing.  I was taken to MRI and CT scans as well.

Next day, my doc came to see me with a panel of her orthopedic team, and this time around, she seemed (suspiciously) much much kinder and more empathetic towards me (whassup doc?).  She said that my muscles especially those around the shoulders and arms were all inflammed and strained quite badly.  She asked me if I had struggled a lot before calling the paramedics and I started breaking down in tears.  I told her the stupid ordeal of finding a way to save myself by crawling on my tummy all over my house with a pillow as my life raft and duvet cover as my mummy-looking makeshift splint.  I had to be resourceful because the pain was insupportable.  People who have broken a bone before would know the pain, especially right at the moment of fracture when the sharps ends rub against each other.

I was discharged finally on Thursday evening and guess what, during this entire time, I forgot to wear clothes (because I always sleep nked).  As in, I was under so much duress, clothes didn't even enter my panicking head.  I was just wrapped in blankets and got discharged in a very stylish hospital gown, looking ready for a toga party.

So that's another mini incident.  I've since spoken to a few LLers and some non-unioners, and they say it can happen when your calluses are hardening and some parts might be rubbing other parts the wrong way and you get 'FRACTURE ELECTROCUTION' (not on WebMD, I coined this myself UNICORN - Dr. Guichet Internal Femurs 8cm - Summer 2016).  She warned me that it could happen again but at the very least, I got a first sneak peak at my right leg xrays and there are hypertrophic calluses/clouds around my whopping 10cm non-union lengthened gap.  She says it's no guanrantee of anything because they could disappear as fast as they appear (kinda like the sun in London) but at this very moment - it was good news and that's GOOD ENOUGH FOR ME UNICORN - Dr. Guichet Internal Femurs 8cm - Summer 2016

CLL is fun eh?  Very eventful to say the least...  posted some pictures on insta during those moments.  Part PTSD came from the exact same pain when my left leg fractured and was left unattended for 5 days while Guichet was away and he was convinced it was just fast bone consolidation and refused to prescribe me morphine or painkillers (we were allowed copious quantities of aspirin).  Thank god for my wonder nurse who resourcefully grinded sleeping pills into my meals so that I literally slept through 5 days until Guichet returned to London and granted me an overdue consultation and xray. 

In both situations, I felt like a nunchuk, broken and dangling in 2 pieces.  It reminds me of starring in a sadistic magic show where I get sawed in half, except it happened for real.

https://www.instagram.com/unicorn_gets_taller/

Like (0)
Posted on Aug 15, 2018, 11:53 pm
#1045

Hang on in there beautiful!! You are truly one of the strongest and most inspirational people I have had the pleasure to meet and to now call my good friend.  Even in your times of pain you continue to want to inspire and help others! You are at the final uphill slope, the top of this personal everest you must climb.....stay strong!! 😘😘

Like (0)
Posted on Aug 16, 2018, 1:27 am
#1046

Trying to post a very touching video here of someone else, who humbles and inspires me.

Like (0)
Posted on Aug 16, 2018, 4:29 pm
#1047

Quote from: Unicorn888 on August 16, 2018, 01:27:20 AMTrying to post a very touching video here of someone else, who humbles and inspires me.


SHORT VERSION
https://www.instagram.com/p/Bmi8n6ZB3xq/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

COMPLETE VERSION
https://www.instagram.com/p/Bmi-PSVh6B_/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link

Like (0)
Posted on Aug 17, 2018, 6:25 pm
#1048

Wow, sorry to hear. This story just keeps on getting more and more mortifying. Sorry if I missed this, but are you able to walk around unaided, and for how long? I hope you feel better, I really can't believe for how long this whole thing has dragged on.

Also, did they ever figure out what the cause of the pain in your leg actually was? It's very frightening that you can randomly have onsets of 9/10 pain for no reason after the surgery and especially after so much time.

Like (0)
Posted on Aug 19, 2018, 5:07 pm
#1049

Quote from: CaptainAmerica on August 17, 2018, 06:25:07 PMWow, sorry to hear. This story just keeps on getting more and more mortifying. Sorry if I missed this, but are you able to walk around unaided, and for how long? I hope you feel better, I really can't believe for how long this whole thing has dragged on.

Also, did they ever figure out what the cause of the pain in your leg actually was? It's very frightening that you can randomly have onsets of 9/10 pain for no reason after the surgery and especially after so much time.


Hey!  No worries, always trying to keep my chin up whenever wherever.  Kinda need to, can't wallow in sorrows all the time.  Would be such a waste of my new height.

Yeah, it was frightening and the bloods came back with very high inflammation markers.  NHS is making me go back every week now for blood tests to double check.  They think it's some random callus rubbing or pressing on a nerve or something.  Coz the pain only happened when I moved in the wrong position, exactly like when my left leg fractured.  If no movement, it doesn't hurt at all, but 1mm more and you're ready to give your right arm for the pain to disappear.

That said, I got a good peek at my recently grafted right leg and there are BEAUTIFUL cloudy calluses on one side, faint but round and bridged.  The underside has NOTHING and the doc explained that it's because they don't graft 360 degrees around the nail.  They can only reach 1 side.  So hopefully, as it solidifies, hopefully it will start to wrap around as well.  So I'm definitely not out of the woods.

I was promoted to 1 crutch and after last week's emergency, got demoted to crutches again UNICORN - Dr. Guichet Internal Femurs 8cm - Summer 2016  Well, at this point in time, as long as I've no pain, I'm grateful and I do try to live my life and ENJOY my taller self.

Will post some photos of society outings that I'm NOT GOING to let my botched up surgery to drag me down!

https://www.instagram.com/unicorn_gets_taller/

Like (0)
Posted on Aug 22, 2018, 7:16 pm
#1050


You're strong. I'm confident you'll be fine at the end. Cloudy calluses are a very good sign.

I also get random knee pains more in the range of 7/10. When I'm in pain I limp. My local doctor said I will get premature arthritis. Some people in forum told me this pain is related to retrograde approach. What do you think?

Like (0)

You must be logged in to post a reply.

Related Topics