Anyone here have it or had a procedure to alleviate it?
I do on Friday....
Anyone here have it or had a procedure to alleviate it?
I do on Friday....
Obviously not a golfer.
My wife had an Ulnar nerve anterior transposition a couple years ago. What are you wanting to know?
Basically that. How it went, how much improvement, etc. Anything, I guess.
My best friend from HS is an ortho PA and he prepped me a bit, but his story was different than my surgeon’s.
Also, seems I might have the option to stay awake for it. Yikes.
Obviously not a golfer.
She hasn't had any pain, tingling, or numbness return, so far so good. If I remember correctly she went all way under (I'd ask her but she's still asleep). I believe we left the hospital with her in a full splint immobilizing everything from the shoulder down. It was a pretty simple procedure from my end, sometimes I wonder if I need the surgery due to some pain I have near the elbow, but I'm pretty sure it's just tennis elbow from lifting weights. Good luck with your surgery!
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"when you're happy you enjoy the melody but, when you're broken you understand the lyrics".
I think I’ll be pretty immobilized and can’t exercise (sweat = change the bandage) for two weeks, but that much immobile is more than advertised.They aren’t doing anything for my thumb which hurts worse.
Expectation I’m told to have is no strength recovery in my last two fingers, but at least they won’t claw up later in life.
I’m leaning to nappy time. I’m good with surgery, but not sure I can wrap my head around my own.
Obviously not a golfer.
EDIT: Just noticed you had it scheduled for today, how did it go as you type with one hand......
In my case the day after surgery it was like having a new hand.... Minus the surgical pains and rehab of course. I had surgery in time to recover full strength in my pinky and ring however but it took forever as both fingers were atrophied. All depends on if the nerves are damaged too far to recover or can slowly repair themselves. In my case the nerve was moved well around to the front of the arm and out of the "funny bone" channel which of course means cutting the tendon holding it in. With less tissue over the funny bone point it can be quite painful to hit it on things. Gone is the funny bone sensation when it is hit and it can be instant pain on the bone.
I still to this day find myself picking up objects using my pointing finger and middle or flip off finger and not the full hand. Just kind of shimming things in there like I was holding a piece of paper between them but I have some carpal tunnel issues as well when it gets irritated.
There are varying degrees of this surgery so I do not want to presume how yours will go.
Location and degree of impingement will determine your scar size and position they opened me up more than a lot that I see. And in my case I was put under and not awake. Mine was done at Panorama Orthopedic.
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Last edited by USMC88-93; 08-24-2018 at 22:01.
In the end, it was 15 minutes (I’m told), and they found where it was pinched, so they just “released” it without full translocation. I don’t know what will prevent it from happening again. No pain yesterday. Some after sleeping today though.
Obviously not a golfer.
Nerves and the protective covering around them can do strange things when exposed to trauma and/or irritation.
Some good info: Ulnar Nerve Entrapment at the Elbow (Cubital Tunnel Syndrome)
Liberals never met a slippery slope they didn't grease.
-Me
I wish technology solved people issues. It seems to just reveal them.
-Also Me
It is weird that it happened. I do all the normal 'causative' things (type, mouse, write, pick up toddler, fish, etc), but far more with my right hand, and this was left.
I'm convinced it was dacarbazine chemo from lymphoma, since it was the nerve right near some initial infusions and which had horrible parathesias and neuropathy, but i guess neither here nor there.
Day 3 of 14 and this wrap / bandaging is sure getting old, though. Showering with a bag is lame.
Obviously not a golfer.