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Zero Gravity Chairs

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Hi,

Zero gravity chairs can be very expensive; there are some really nice leather

ones that are designed for a living room. There are some less expensive ones

though that do the exact same thing. I bought mine form a hardware store; it

looks like patio furniture and it cost $28. It works wonderfully and there are

many days it is in my living room! I highly recommend this type of chair for

anyone that has disc problems; it's like you can feel the discs " opening up " as

you lean back on the chair. It feels really good! For those interested check out

Target; I know they had the chairs last year for about $50.

Hope everyone has a low pain day!

 

 

From: v1mob <v1mobyahoo (DOT) com>

Subject: Re: Any experiences with Spinal Fusion

To: Hugs-N-Pain@ yahoogroups. com

Date: Friday, May 22, 2009, 8:00 AM

> >

> > The Orthopedic Surgeon we went to this week said my wife needs a spinal

fusion to get the space back at L4-L5 where she has the worst degeneration. This

surgeon only uses the Open PLIF procedure. I have been reading about a MAST PLIF

which is minimally invasive. Does anyone out there have experiences (both good

and bad) with either of these?

> >

> > We have an appointment scheduled with a Neurosurgeon for July 21 as a second

opinion, or if he agrees and does the MAST PLIF we might go with him instead.

> >

> > Thank you

> > Marty

> >

> Hi had the exact sugery you mention in 2005.Long recuperation. though very

successful.

>

Thank you, . I'm full of questions.

You mentioned a long recovery period, how long did it take you? The Orthopedic

Surgeon said it would probably be a year before she would " be back up to speed "

and feel like she could do anything she wanted. That sounds pretty good to me

because it's been about 7 months since she's been able to do anything. She can

barely walk now and can't bear to sit anywhere except in my big recliner with

extra pillows under her legs for longer than about 5 minutes. (I've ordered her

one of those Zero-Gravity chairs. The Dr. said it should help her be able to sit

in the living room longer since it takes the pressure off the lower back.)

Most days she never really gets out of bed. But when he says " be back up to

speed " , does he mean how she is now or closer to how she was before the pain

jumped from 4-5 to 9-9.5? He also explained that the surgery would not take away

all of her pain " because you will still have the same 59 year old spine and

body " , but that it should take away about 60% to 75% of the pain. That sounds

really good to me because that would mean pain reduced to about 3-4 and she

hasn't been that low for over 2 years. How much would you say your pain level

went down?

Which type of surgeon did you have, Orthopedic or Neurosurgeon?

Thank you, again. Marty

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Ok...kewl...I see what you mean.  I started looking around and sure enough.  I

have a lot back problems.  My L3 and L4 made a mess of the nerves and I ended up

with my " RSD " leg.  I have sciatica on the other side.  At least both sides get

equal pain.  I'd just hate to feel lop sided.  Amazon has a lot listed.  

How do they work?  I'm really interested in this if it releives pressure on

those nerves. 

Lotacats

Twitter_follow me

http://twitter.com/LotacatsFunPix

Express Chronic Pain Awareness

http://www.cafepress.com/lotacatspix/5815010

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http://www.lotacatsfunpix.com/

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http://lotacats05.deviantart.com/

From: v1mob <v1mobyahoo (DOT) com>

Subject: Re: Any experiences with Spinal Fusion

To: Hugs-N-Pain@ yahoogroups. com

Date: Friday, May 22, 2009, 8:00 AM

> >

> > The Orthopedic Surgeon we went to this week said my wife needs a spinal

fusion to get the space back at L4-L5 where she has the worst degeneration. This

surgeon only uses the Open PLIF procedure. I have been reading about a MAST PLIF

which is minimally invasive. Does anyone out there have experiences (both good

and bad) with either of these?

> >

> > We have an appointment scheduled with a Neurosurgeon for July 21 as a second

opinion, or if he agrees and does the MAST PLIF we might go with him instead.

> >

> > Thank you

> > Marty

> >

> Hi had the exact sugery you mention in 2005.Long recuperation. though very

successful.

>

Thank you, . I'm full of questions.

You mentioned a long recovery period, how long did it take you? The Orthopedic

Surgeon said it would probably be a year before she would " be back up to speed "

and feel like she could do anything she wanted. That sounds pretty good to me

because it's been about 7 months since she's been able to do anything. She can

barely walk now and can't bear to sit anywhere except in my big recliner with

extra pillows under her legs for longer than about 5 minutes. (I've ordered her

one of those Zero-Gravity chairs. The Dr. said it should help her be able to sit

in the living room longer since it takes the pressure off the lower back.)

Most days she never really gets out of bed. But when he says " be back up to

speed " , does he mean how she is now or closer to how she was before the pain

jumped from 4-5 to 9-9.5? He also explained that the surgery would not take away

all of her pain " because you will still have the same 59 year old spine and

body " , but that it should take away about 60% to 75% of the pain. That sounds

really good to me because that would mean pain reduced to about 3-4 and she

hasn't been that low for over 2 years. How much would you say your pain level

went down?

Which type of surgeon did you have, Orthopedic or Neurosurgeon?

Thank you, again. Marty

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Guest guest

I really enjoy mine; it only takes minutes for me to feel relief in my spine. I

talked to my PT about the chairs and she said they are great and considered a

spinal unloading device; similar to ones used at PT but for a fraction of the

cost. I'm including a link that talks about the benefits and background of the

chairs. You can google them and will find a large variety of price ranges; just

remember whatever you pay the overall design and benefits are the same. Lafuma

chairs start at about $100 and I've heard good things about them. I got mine for

under $30 though and have no complaints. Good luck and let me know if you get

one.

 

http://comfortchannel.com/zero_gravity_recliners.shtml

 

Hugs,

 

 

From: v1mob <v1mobyahoo (DOT) com>

Subject: Re: Any experiences with Spinal Fusion

To: Hugs-N-Pain@ yahoogroups. com

Date: Friday, May 22, 2009, 8:00 AM

> >

> > The Orthopedic Surgeon we went to this week said my wife needs a spinal

fusion to get the space back at L4-L5 where she has the worst degeneration. This

surgeon only uses the Open PLIF procedure. I have been reading about a MAST PLIF

which is minimally invasive. Does anyone out there have experiences (both good

and bad) with either of these?

> >

> > We have an appointment scheduled with a Neurosurgeon for July 21 as a second

opinion, or if he agrees and does the MAST PLIF we might go with him instead.

> >

> > Thank you

> > Marty

> >

> Hi had the exact sugery you mention in 2005.Long recuperation. though very

successful.

>

Thank you, . I'm full of questions.

You mentioned a long recovery period, how long did it take you? The Orthopedic

Surgeon said it would probably be a year before she would " be back up to speed "

and feel like she could do anything she wanted. That sounds pretty good to me

because it's been about 7 months since she's been able to do anything. She can

barely walk now and can't bear to sit anywhere except in my big recliner with

extra pillows under her legs for longer than about 5 minutes. (I've ordered her

one of those Zero-Gravity chairs. The Dr. said it should help her be able to sit

in the living room longer since it takes the pressure off the lower back.)

Most days she never really gets out of bed. But when he says " be back up to

speed " , does he mean how she is now or closer to how she was before the pain

jumped from 4-5 to 9-9.5? He also explained that the surgery would not take away

all of her pain " because you will still have the same 59 year old spine and

body " , but that it should take away about 60% to 75% of the pain. That sounds

really good to me because that would mean pain reduced to about 3-4 and she

hasn't been that low for over 2 years. How much would you say your pain level

went down?

Which type of surgeon did you have, Orthopedic or Neurosurgeon?

Thank you, again. Marty

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Hi my name is Jinny and I've been lurking.? The short story is had L3-L5 flip

flop surgery in 1999.? Five months later I was trying to get an agitated patient

back into the nursing home when he went off on me.? Reherniated L3-S1.? Got

osteomyelitis and MRSA so bad I had to be airlifted to the U of FL....my entire

spine from C3 down is now toast.? Failed all meds and conservative approaches,

all meds.? Had spinal cord stimulator in 2006.? I now have RSD and the

stimulator doesn't cover all my pain.? Waiting to consult with new PM specialist

to have the intrathecal pain pump put in.

My question is for .? I followed your link about the zero gravity chairs.?

I also have primary Sjogrens which is slowly drying out my organs and it is

difficult sometimes to inflate my lungs.? Will Medicare cover the cost of the

chair?? I would really benefit from the massage chair.....

Thanks for the post!

Jinny

Port St Lucie FL

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  • 2 weeks later...
Guest guest

My wife is 4 foot 11 inches tall. She has degenerative disc disease at l4-l5 and

the orthopedic surgeon says she needs fusion. She has been at pain level 9 since

February. She has also started getting " clawtoes " , where the toes curl under, to

the point where now she is actually walking on the tops of her toenails. The

only place she has been relatively comfortable is in bed. Because of her height,

she was unable to get into or out of my recliner without assistance and had to

have additional pillows under her calves.

We purchased one of the zero gravity chairs that has powered recline. She is

able to get into, and recline the chair in a comfortable position, by herself.

Most of the time she is able to get out of it by herself also. There are two

models of this chair. The " silhouette " is 2 inches shorter than the regular

model. This 2 inches is enough of a difference to allow her to be able to get in

and out of the chair. She says that the chair is now the most comfortable piece

of furniture we have. We tried out several models in the store. Because of her

height, and back problem, she was unable to get the non-powered model of the

chair to recline by herself. The store did not have one of the lawn chairs until

three days ago, so we do not know if she could have reclined it by herself or

even if she would have fit in it properly.

I would have to say that even though it was fairly expensive, this chair was a

good investment for us. My wife is now able to join the rest of the family in

the living room for longer than 5 minutes. The first day we had the chair, she

even went to sleep in it!

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