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Posted on Nov 13, 2021, 5:56 pm
#1
It would be appreciated if you can also fill the topic ''My doctor and my pain'', in ''Limb Lengthening Discussions'', both with the punctuation and the name of your doctor.
Since a lot of pain/no pain depends on the skills and experience of the doctors, like correctly choosing the point of pin insertion, the ''rhythm’’ of distraction, etc, you are probably contributing to reduce other people's pain!
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Posted on Nov 13, 2021, 6:39 pm
#2
I think pain has much more to do with the innate pain tolerance of the patient as well as what the patient does during the process.
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Posted on Nov 13, 2021, 7:18 pm
#3
Yes, I agree, but even with individual variation, responses may still be a very valid experience indication.
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Posted on Nov 13, 2021, 11:16 pm
#4
I did unilateral, two different doctors (both first world), two different devices (Femur, fitbone/Precice), 2 different continents.
Pain was not Doctor related, my pain level was same in both cases.
I have also broken my lower back, pelvis (5 places), ankle (bad fracture. overlapping , required plates and through ankle stasis screw), had spinal fusion (L5/S1), had 2 Hair transplants, separated my shoulder, broken my fibia, 20 root canals (conscious, 9 in one day), teeth extractions, adult circumcision, various road rash on legs/ribs - i went through most of this with minimal pain relief (i don't like to use pain relief for health and mental clarity reasons) ....in terms of pain(and for months, not just a few days/week) LL def tops the list , I voted 9/10 - but you need to factor in my stiff muscles due to my age (early 50's).
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Posted on Nov 14, 2021, 8:13 am
#5
Thanks a lot for sharing your experience! You had really bad luck with so many problems...however the most important is here you are, I hope free of most problems.

You did unilateral because you are going to lenghten the other limb next or you have some special condition in one limb, if you don't mind me to ask?

May I also ask about that stifness of muscles: did you prepare with  physical exercice for the surgery, did the doctors oriented or asked you to do? Do you think it would have make any difference before surgery or also in recovery and even thereafter for "maintenance" (according to your physical condition and age)?

Thanks again, hope you are soon totally OK with all health issues. Early 50's nowadays with all medicine evolution, known healthy habits and social evolution is not being "old" as in our grandparents time!
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Posted on Nov 18, 2021, 10:13 am
#6
Veterans please vote! PLEASE help LL candidates.
There are people who just can't bear 10/10 pain  without fainting or having 7/10 pain all along for months being alone in another country....
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Posted on Nov 18, 2021, 4:23 pm
#7
I voted for a 10 because that was my maximum pain at some points. However, pain is temporary. You forget pain. For the first two weeks my pain was always floating around a 5-8. After two-three weeks it was 1-4.

Would I do it again? Absolutely. Pain is temporary, glory is eternal. Man up
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Posted on Nov 20, 2021, 11:09 am
#8
Hi, thanks for your support. Yes the punctuation is intended to be the degree you overall retained from bad and good, from that experience in you life. If for example I was only once during 5 minutes with 10/10 pain, I would choose much less than 10. But if that was your "paramount" moment when you felt in the limit of faiting, regretting LL, or that you have more present still today, etc, I would chose 10.
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Posted on Nov 20, 2021, 11:14 am
#9
In fact I should have asked "what was your more carachteristic/dominant degree of pain if you could only use 1 to 10 points?" (Ie  not necessarily the most intensive pain moment).
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Posted on Nov 24, 2021, 12:41 am
#10
Mod,  have I violated some forum's rule by making a bit "provocative" appeal to veterans to vote on the single open poll, about pain,  for all candidates information prior to deciding on LL?
Personal tolerance to pain is essential to evaluate proactive atitude in the physiotherapy and recovery, thus final outcome.
And a good sample of other's real life pain is significant.
My words were strong but not offensive. And we are all adults...
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