NORM OR ANYONE PLEASE HELP
REALISE I HAVE NOT BEEN ON HERE FOR AGES AND TOO MUCH HAS HAPPENED TO WRITE ALL IN THIS PLEA HOWEVER I NEED AS MUCH DOCUMENTATION AS POSSIBLE TO TAKE TO A MEETING WITH ACCIDENT AND EMERGENCY NEXT WEEK TO PROVE THAT PEOPLE DO WALK WITH A COMPLETELY TORN ACHILLIES TENDON. ANY HELP TO PROVE TO THE SILLY MAN WHO HAS SAID THERE WAS NO WAY IT WAS RUPTURED AS I WALKED ON IT PLEASE WOULD BE APPRECIATED X X X
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You can walk with a complete rupture. You are an example and if you read enough blogs here you will find people who had delayed diagnoses who were walking with a limp.
I think you have other flexor muscles like the big toe one I think that can partially compensate for the loss. A good foot and ankle physiotherapist will give you the details. Your orthopaedic surgeon should know.
Why are you meeting with A and E? You should not be having to prove this? Have you written to the complaints department?
I have been via the complaints that is why I am having a meeting with the head of A and E as they have said the fact I could walk was used to decide that my tendon was NOT ruptured completley even though 9 weeks later I walked in to surgery. I just wandered if there was any research I could download to produce
[WORDPRESS HASHCASH] The poster sent us ‘0 which is not a hashcash value.
I’m sure you just need to check an orthopaedic text book as it is clear cut that you can walk with a rupture. If you go to patient.co.uk (very good web site) and look up symptoms of achilles rupture it says
“A flat-footed type of walk. You can walk and bear weight, but cannot push off the ground properly on the side where the tendon is ruptured.”
Hopefully they will just apologise, good luck
As Nicky said. I walked into the hospital flat footed. When the ortho nurse called me in first thing she said was Achilles tendon as she watched me walk to the door. I then walked on it for 3 days waiting for surgery. They didn’t even give me crutches.
Not to outdo Stuart because he is one of my favorite people, but I walked on mine for 2 weeks. It wasn’t a good walk, but I was walking and driving.
The nurse did say at my first visit, well if you did rupture you wouldn’t be able to walk on it, the doctor walked in, and eye balled it.
Good luck!
I walked on a ruptured ATR for 4 months albeit flat foot and with a horrible limp. (I don’t think it was fully ruptured until month 3, but that’s a whole other story) IT got worse as time went on. I’m sorry to hear of your troubles.
I had issue with my worker’s comp insurance approving the consult with the foot and Ankle specialist for 5 weeks and I finally called and ask them “Are you going to approve me appointment with the specialist, I need an answer so I can decided on whether I need to speak with my attorney about this matter”. They set up the appointment 2 days later and I got my surgery.
Good Luck
I’ve got nothing but more anecdotes, alysbach, sorry — and one “hearsay” opinion from a fancy sports-medicine surgeon whose name I no long remember!! Not much to take to court, or to a similar tribunal.
FWIW: I walked around (and drove a shift car!) for the 8 days between my ATR #1 and my surgery. Like the others, it wasn’t a pretty walk, but I got around. Most of the time I splayed my toes out to the side, and I CERTAINLY did that when climbing stairs, so I could get my entire injured foot on the step.
The hearsay opinion was from a surgeon at the U. of Toronto Sports Medicine Clinic who referred me to surgery. I’d had an UltraSound exam by then, and after I told him how I was climbing stairs, he told me that if I’d seen him initially, he would have skipped the UltraSound, because he thinks that method of walking up stairs is reliably diagnostic of a complete ATR.
But ALL of this only makes sense after everybody agrees and admits that patients with complete ATRs can WALK!!
Some people say that the first principle of Physics — and maybe even of Science — is “If it exists, it must be possible”. ATR walking clearly exists (and in a wide range of ATR patients, approaching 100%), so only a fool would say that it’s impossible.
I ran a half marathon with a partial torn one and walked on it for another 5 months.
My Ortho told me had he know I would not have been allowed.
there should be a video of kobe bryant shooting freethrows with his ruptured somewhere