I have perfectly balanced tibia to femur length ratio - the problem is because of this perfect ratio (since no bone is relatively shorter then other) - I am confused on where to do LL (tibia or femur) - I am leaning towards tibia because I believe relatively longer tibias will look less freaky then longer femurs. Or am I overthinking this? I mean many people did 3, even 4 -4.5 inches in one segment, so did they not think about looking odd ? Any input/opinion? I will add 7.5 inches. thanks.
3 inches on femurs is common because it's a stronger bone, internals are used in femurs making it easier, it blends in easier and proportions are easily hidden unlike tibias which stand out more, and wearing shoes helps if you have long femurs but would make your proportions even more awkward if you did 3" tibias.
7.5" is an unrealistic and dangerous goal
Quote from: Penguinn on June 05, 2018, 08:51:30 PM3 inches on femurs is common because it's a stronger bone, internals are used in femurs making it easier, it blends in easier and proportions are easily hidden unlike tibias which stand out more, and wearing shoes helps if you have long femurs but would make your proportions even more awkward if you did 3" tibias.
7.5" is an unrealistic and dangerous goal
good input, I do wear lifts - so your point is that if I wear 2.75" lifts - it is anyway going to make tibia look longer so if I add 3 inches more - that will look odd - so why not do LL on femur, correct?
btw, I know 7.5 ich kinda high, but anything below 7 inches in my opinion is not worth LL.
Quote from: 419 on June 05, 2018, 08:53:07 PMgood input, I do wear lifts - so your point is that if I wear 2.75" lifts - it is anyway going to make tibia look longer so if I add 3 inches more - that will look odd - so why not do LL on femur, correct?
btw, I know 7.5 ich kinda high, but anything below 7 inches in my opinion is not worth LL.
I hope you meant 7 cm, not 7 inches
7 inches is 17.7 cm. That is fuking dangerous both for your physical and mental health. Most likely you will never walk properly. Now 7 or 7.5 cm is entirely different story, not sure if ATL surgery will be necessary, maybe if you lenghten slow you will avoid it? BodyBuilder or someone who did around 7-7.5 cm will be able to give proper answer. Also I am not proportion nazi or lover but anything +8cm will look terrible if you decide to go to a beach or in the gym during the summer.
Quote from: justaveragedude on June 05, 2018, 08:57:56 PM7 inches is 17.7 cm. That is fuking dangerous both for your physical and mental health. Most likely you will never walk properly. Now 7 or 7.5 cm is entirely different story, not sure if ATL surgery will be necessary, maybe if you lenghten slow you will avoid it? BodyBuilder or someone who did around 7-7.5 cm will be able to give proper answer.
sorry guys, my bad - yes I meant 7.5 cms, - 3 inches. Any more inputs/opinions on tibia vs femur would be appreciated.
I know that tibias lenghtening is generally more stressful for your body than femurs. If you ask me 7.5 is the absolute limit for tibias while with femurs you can go 7-8 cm. Also I think that many CLL-femurs surgeries are a little more cheaper than the tibias ones. If you have the money and want to do tibias go for it, but choose doctor will good reputation, if you can definitely meet with him, make him tell you everything about the CLL procedure you want to have including how, what and why he/she will to your body before, during and after the limb lenghtening process.
Quote from: 419 on June 05, 2018, 08:59:45 PMsorry guys, my bad - yes I meant 7.5 cms, - 3 inches. Any more inputs/opinions on tibia vs femur would be appreciated.
From what I've gathered here and at the Paley Institute, femurs seem to be easier and less likely to have complications. Plus, they can be lengthened more.
Your tibias would have to be longer than normal if you were under 5'6" and wanted to get LL on them at 7cm and didn't want to be in the moderate/high risk category.
From my understanding it's not that 3 inches can't be done safely on the tibias. It's just that if it's beyond the % outlined of your total overall tibia length than you automatically are at higher risk for complications.
That's why I don't understand why everyone isn't posting full pics below the torso to see what appropriate lengths and which part of their leg they should get LL in. It would help experienced members have a much better understanding of what can most likely be done and what's safe/what isn't.
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