Is this common?
The lingering question on my mind is how long till I’m FWB?
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The lingering question on my mind is how long till I’m FWB?
9 Comments »
Filed under: Uncategorized
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Tomorrow it will be a week since my achilles popped on me. Reading this makes me so happy that there is an end to this, but the journey seems so long!!! Well done you, enjoy your liberation x
Wow. That IS a long time…especially looking at it from week one. Glad that you are doing well and sounds like you are just about there. Great!
If your heel lifts are collapsing under your weight, even part-way, that’s just wrong!! Heel lifts are supposed to be made of firm rubber, to change and hold your ankle angle. (Mine have always been blue, but I’ve never seen a good study on that! )
Go back to the people who gave you the wrong ones, or go to somebody else. E.g., every ski shop in the world carries the right kind, and I doubt you’d pay $10 for a nice set of them — especially after you tell them your story!!
The main problem is that my tendon will not flex far enough to where I can stand flat on my foot. The angle of my ankle/foot was at -45 degrees for a month in the cast. This walking boot is almost at 90 degrees minus the four “cushions” in the heel which do little to prop my foot. Therefore, until I get more ROM in my foot/tendon, it’s not able to support more than partial weight. PT is helping a lot, but very painful.
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Who said anything about the wound weeping?
And I’m with Norm, I don’t understand what hurts. I had some tenderness in the heel of my injured foot when I went from NWB to PWB, but that went away in just a few days.
Sometimes people confuse the pain originating from the stitches or wound stretching rather than the achilles itself. Movement upwards from plantar to dorsiflex and stretch the repairing would - causing it to weep.
So your foot is at a less obtuse angle now than it was in the casts? If the upper part of your boot is snug to your upper calf, and the sole of your foot isn’t tender, I still don’t understand what hurts, or what is uncomfortable, when you shift weight to that foot. There should be virtually no strain on your ankle and AT, unless I’m missing (or forgetting) something.
The “I’m obviously not ready to stand on my toes” confuses me. Walking in an orthotic boot with heel lifts is nothing like standing on your toes, though it’s a bit like walking in shoes with (high) heels, except that you’ve got the shank of the boot nailed to your upper calf to do the job of your AT and ankle.
If your other shoe doesn’t match, it’s way awkward, but the solution is to adapt your other shoe to match.
I can put some weight on my foot, however the month it was in the cast, my foot was at an obtuse angle rather than a 90 degree, the way my OS set it. Now my foot still points down but ROM is already improving. Therefore, I’m obviously not ready to stand on my toes. As for PT, I’m going to try this one and see how they’re doing. Six weeks is the recommendation from my doc, but I may shop around if needed (i.e. perhaps someone better suited to endurance sports).
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What keeps you from putting more than “barely any” weight on your foot, in the boot? If it’s soreness at the bottom of your foot (esp. heel), “welcome to the club”. Squishy insoles inside the boot help, but then you have to raise up your other foot even higher to stay aligned. I don’t think anything else SHOULD bother you about weight-bearing in the boot, or even walking in the boot, once your foot gets used to the weight.
When that happens, the boot should give you enough support that you can walk (”clomp”?) at full speed, striking the heel then rolling straight forward over the toe. It’s almost like normal walking, except that your shin (and the top of the boot) bear the load that your AT would normally take, and there’s no “push-off” at the end of the stride.
If you had a hinged boot, you could extend your toes (plantarflex) at the end of the stride, at least after your other foot takes up your weight. And as your strength increases, you can push off sooner and sooner and more and more — until you can do 1-leg heel raises inside the hinged boot, all while being totally protected against dorsiflexing your ankle! Nifty gizm
[...]Fortunately, I think, I was never in a cast. I got a boot, the black Donjoy monstrosity, the day I ruptured and that was all I ever had. But, I did go into a cast after my fourth surgery, which was just to remove the internal sutures that had caused an abscess. I only had it on for a week and was free to walk in it. Maybe I was lucky but I actually found it more comfortable at night than the boot was, but the boot was definitely better for walking. At five weeks post-op, you should be able to put a fair amount of weight on your bad foot. What I, and others, have found helpful is to make sure your bad foot stays in front on your good foot for a while and make sure any weight is transmitted through your heel. It feels odd but I only used this around the house and relied on my crutches if I had to go very far. Until I got to the point where I could actually flex my ankle some. Also, it is really important to wear a shoe that puts the soles of both feet the same or nearly the same distance off the floor. You can give yourself back and hip problems otherwise.
I’m curious why you say you are looking forward to PT for a “few” se
jski,
thanks for the answer. Any links / url to those technic doc or video would be nice
About your doctor - this’s just my opinion, but it looks like applies to almost 99% of us simple (no stars) people - you get doc attention at initial visit and surgery and the next post OP visit and that’s all. You might not get anything concrete after those visits and not many Docs even know in details recovery protocols - they rule based on 6 or even 12 months recovery time. They outsource you to PT for recovery protocol. And as many mentioned it’s already - PT is much more important in post OP / cast than Doc.
As my Doc honestly told me - ” if about surgery it’s me, but if about recovery or tendon and etc than it’s PT, who has far more info for that matter.
My point is don’t even try to extract much info from Doc, but concentrate on PT.
Did you get PT? If not, ask your Doc about PT. Even Doc might tell you it’s too early for PT sessions, insist to meet with PT. It isn’t easy to find good PT for ATR - so try more than one PT - just talk to them and ask about protocols they will apply to you. Ask about other protocols that you like
mike-
I started massaging with fingers and lube with great results initially. The remaining central area of adhesion is smaller and much tougher than the original periphery. Lately I’ve been using the cap of a Sharpie pen with lube to press hard and manipulate the dime sized area, a bit painful and progress has slowed, but I’m guessing better than waiting for Docs instructions. Moving in all directions is supposed to be important. It helps that sweetie is a massage therapist but I don’t let her touch it. Look up the “Graston Technique” to see where I got the idea. I think someone here suggested the handle of a butter knife as well.
gunner-
I almost ordered a hinged boot on my own but I think I’ll be out of the boot altogether pretty soon. I walk around the house barefoot but put the boot back on if I’m doing anything that takes concentration off walking.
5 week post-op visit tomorrow, will be interesting…
I would say FWB as tolerated as soon as you get into a boot. If you have a chance look up the VacoCast. It’s far superior to anything I’ve seen and well worth the extra cost. Order it yourself or get your doc to give it to you at cost since you recommended it. Very easy to walk in at 90 with a small lift in other shoe.
It sounds like you’ve got one of the subpar docs who either doesn’t know or care about rehab. My advice would be to find a PT who will buy into Norm’s protocol and fire away. BTW, you don’t have to go see the doc every time he/she says to come back. I’ve cancelled several appointments since PT started. Just not necessary - there’ s nothing the doc could do.
We’re going to have one final powwow in a couple weeks, doc, PT and me, to review the experience and maybe even write it up.
As for prevention, I’m guessing that, given the abuse I subjected my AT’s to over the years, the only prevention would have been abstinence!
How do you do this “massage adhesions” / deep tissue massage to remove scar tissue?
Hi,
3 to 4 weeks to walking boot sounds about right but everyone progresses at their own rate. Any longer sounds suspect unless you have a difficult case.
I am 5 weeks post-op, ruptured water skiing, open surgery, haven’t started a blog but have read a lot of good info here and got leads on plenty more as well. The research has given me the confidence to start rehab and PT on my own. My doc has not exactly been open discussing “the future” and prefers to proceed slowly and take one step at a time. I can’t blame him but it’s my foot!
At 3 weeks the lightweight splint came off and the foot went into a cam walker boot. I was supposed to be PWB with crutches but immediately went FWB on my heel and continued with crutches for a few days while I eased into limping heel-toe in the boot. At 5 weeks I am walking about as normal as can be expected in the fixed 90 deg boot. I wanted an adjustable hinge but doc wouldn’t go for it and the local supply house didn’t stock them anyway. Once out of the splint I also started passive ROM, then active, and now mild resistance with therabands and seated heal lifts without weight. Doc doesn’t
[...]Thanks Gerry and Norm, my surgeon did say post surgery that my tendon “did not look good.” She put me in a cast for 4 weeks and wants another 6-8 weeks with the walking boot. I’ll look into the recommendations of the Vaco products…
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+1 to everything Gerryr said.
The protocol a few of us have been following here, which produced excellent results in a recent study with BOTH surgical AND non-surgical patients, calls for “protected weight-bearing” (in a boot) at TWO weeks, progressing to WBAT (full WB “as tolerated”) at FOUR weeks. Before 5 weeks in, I was forgetting where I’d put the cane that replaced the crutches — i.e., FWB.
There are protocols that call for much FASTER FWB than that, mostly tested after surgery, and mostly showing benefits (and none showing disbenefits, AFAIK). Several are linked from the main page here, in the “studies” link. One metastudy showed the benefits of a “functional orthosis”, i.e., a HINGED boot, which is what I recommend. Blogger “gunner” here is one of several who have tried the new VacoCast or VacoPed hinged boot, and gunner and almost all the other users recommend it highly.
Your “ignorance of tendinosis” may have led to your ATR, but the vast majority of ATRs come “out of the blue”, to athletes with no prior history of AT pain, weakness, or inflammation. (I’ve done “both sides now”, and both “out of the blue”.) And t
[...]First of all, it is the duty of your surgeon to fully answer your questions. Ask for a detailed plan and don’t settle for less than that. They are not doing this for free. You have every right to ask for a full explanation and it’s their duty as a doctor to explain fully. I didn’t ask enough questions nor did I do any research immediately after my ATR and prior to going under the knife for the first time. By the time I got to the fourth time I was damn welled prepared and in the process fired on surgeon who wasn’t being honest with me about his intentions.
That said, if you are going into a walking boot, will you still be using crutches? If not, then you will be FWB.
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