Almost 3 weeks and my biggest challenge is….
Sleeping! I can’t get comfortable in the boot at night, it hurts my knees and AT to swing it around as I sleep, and I get hot spots when it swells at night - waking me up and requiring icing if anyone’s awake to bring it to me. How does everyone else do it? I need a night splint that’s lower profile, no hinges, bulk, etc.!! ANY SUGGESTIONS???? I need sleep!!!!
I’ve seen the night splints online, but they all look like they are at 90 degrees or more - I’m still at 15 and feeling like 10 is natural. Any ideas for the sleep issues? The main problem is having to reposition my leg every 30 min or so for pressure points, etc. Thanks, Kim
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I’m a side sleeper and the hardest part is I sleep on my left side and my right leg with cast or boot crushes my left. I started putting my left foot under a pillow and lay my right foot on top. It pads my left foot and leg and elevates the right. The other thing I did was untuck the sheets at the foot of the bed. Gave me extra room to move my foot around. Hope this helps.
I did the same thing with the pillow between my feet. I also put a pillow behind my back so I wouldn’t roll over in my sleep. My leg did not swell at night, only in the day when I put it down. That sounds very frustrating! Maybe you could keep an ice chest full of ice packs next to your bed so you don’t have to wait for someone to bring them to you. Hope you get a good nights rest soon.
For bedroom or upstairs icing, I dug out a big wide-mouthed thermos jug, stuck an empty bread bag in it, filled the bag/jug with ice cubes, and closed the jug with the top rim of the bag sticking out. I kept a chamois/shammy cloth near the jug.
When I wanted to ice, I opened the jug, pulled the bag up, grabbed a cube, held it in the cloth, and rubbed it over my leg. The ice lasted a long time, way longer than I sleep.
I’ve never had a night splint, but I think it’s just a thermoplastic “angle iron” that’s wrapped up with your leg, e.g., in an Ace (elastic) bandage. I’d expect PTs and Orthos to be able to whip them up quickly and easily. (Don’t know about cheaply, if your insurance won’t cover it. Spoiled some here in Canada.)
Speaking of icing, I encourage all of you who have any issues with swelling to check out the Aircast CryoCuff that both ices and compresses your ankle and foot at the same time. They put this on me at the end of each of my first 3 PT sessions and I was amazed with the results. I ordered one from amazon.com yesterday for $123 and can hardly wait for it to arrive on Tuesday. Yesterday, @ just over 7 weeks post-op, I walked a over a mile in my crocs, did plenty of walking around the house throughout the day, and then went to a party last night where I spent a lot of time standing in my crocs. By the end of the night, my ankle and foot were pretty swollen so I went home and added a couple bags of ice…what a mess, water dripping everywhere, but the ice really helped the swelling. I think icing and compression will be the key for me to get to back to running soon as possible (my goal is in the next 3 weeks) and am certain the Aircast CryoCuff will be a key ingredient…
Thanks, I’m going to check it out. Has anyone tried a night splint like this:
http://www.nationalbraceandsplint.com/Baker-90-Fixed-Night-Splint_p_372.html
It looks really comfortable. I’m going to ask the doc if it’s safe? Thanks for the tips on icing. It’s been a great way to replace the “not allowed ” Motrin and makes my leg much more comfortable. As soon as I ice my knee, I can feel the cold in my toes.
At 3 weeks I was starting my second week in the boot. I was wearing it in bed, minus the detachable sole, and at 4 weeks was allowed to remove the boot at night. It did concern me that my wife might accidentally ‘bump’ into my lower leg so I placed a pillow between us in the ‘danger’ area. Worked fine and I’m now at 3 months from ATR, in shoes.
As you are coming up to 4 weeks are you likely to be given a nocturnal rest from your boot? Worth asking about maybe, even though the night splint looks comfortable . By the way, my boot was at 15 degrees at 4-6 weeks, then adjusted to neutral.
Hospital consultants have their favoured protocols and injuries vary, and this was the standard at my ortho centre.
I really hate the boot particularly when trying to sleep. I think it’s a common problem and I eventually just took it off to when I slept. I was pretty nervous the first night but I protected it with a big wall of pillows to avoid the wifey kicking me plus a big pile to elevate the leg overnight.
Good luck!
Hi Kim!
Has your Dr. said whether he’d be okay with you sleeping without the boot at night? That has made alot of difference for me. Yes, I was a bit hesitant and nervous at first, but its been really helpful and not as scary as it sounds!
Hope the swelling is improving too! I’m finding that if I spend a lot of time walking around or sitting at my desk without my foot elevated, the swelling returns. Worse if not in the boot (ie; showering).
Have a great day!
Jodi
No removing it at night yet, Jodi. Bummer that you’re still having swelling at 5 weeks - apparently it continues on for months with some folks. I have the feeling I’ll be one - the pain is excruciating when my leg is down more than 5 min. or so at 3 weeks - although elevation brings instant relief. It’s annoying as it limits what I can do on crutches.