Driving again!
Well, I saw the physio for the first time last Wednesday - 12 weeks 2 days after my ATR. The good news is that thanks to the exercises recommended by the excellent people on here I am making good progress. I’ve ditched my aircast boot and am now back in 2 shoes and actually driving again.
After 3 days in shoes I can say that my foot and ankle are still swollen most of the time and I’m walking with a significant limp but… I AM walking and driving. That is a fantastic feeling
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Stalledminidriver,
Great news about being able to drive. I can’t wait to start putting some miles on my car too.
Have you thought about wearing compression socks? I had significant swelling and they took care of it within days.
Be careful about accepting that limp. You need to get back to the proper walking technique. My physical therapist really gets on me if I do any limping.
I’m so jealous! Enjoy your freedom!
Starshep - good idea, I’ll look into the socks, and I’ll be careful of the limp! I have a choice at the moment, walk very slowly with almost no limp or faster with a limp. It depends on whether I’m walking alone or with someone! I start Physio classes on Thursday which should help.
I am really enjoying driving again, albeit just my normal modern car which is dull but easy to drive. My target is to drive my 40 year old classic soon - that requires a much stronger foot and I am not prepared to try it just yet.
I’m not sure there’s any harm in limping by shortening one side of your stride while that ankle is stiff and that calf is weak. As long as your stride is otherwise normal — especially toes pointed forward as normal, not angled out to the side — I don’t see the harm.
While your calf is still weak, there’s no way to “push off” at the end of a strong stride. Short mincing steps don’t have much push-off, so you might pass for symmetrical, but I don’t see the advantage.
While your ankle is too stiff to dorsiflex ~15 degrees, you can’t keep that foot flat on the floor while you take a long stride over it (and you also can’t “cheat” by lifting the heel early, if your calf-and-AT are still too weak). But you can stride over the other foot just fine. Does it help to skip that so you can walk symmetrically? Maybe, but I’m not convinced.
I also like hinged boots for this transition — ots of calf-and-AT exercise but still safe.