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Joyce

I feel so sorry that you had to go through such pain for so long, with no

accurate diagnosis. It goes to show that we must guard ourselves against

overeager surgeons and be persistant in getting the right answers. Fortunately

for me, my symptoms showed up in the hip where, in fact, the problem was,

although I did have awful pain in the sacroiliac joints, which has now

diappeared along with the hip pain, since surgery. I had no ROM to speak of in

the bad hip, and the pain from bone-on-bone movement was causing me to grab any

and all meds I could get, to get some relief. At that time, I had been advised

that a THR was the only procedure available, so I went on a waitlist. That was

3 years ago. Gradually all my atheltic activities had to be dropped, as pain

worsened. This can be so gradual that we don't always realize how much we have

given up and how limited our lives have become. Not to mention, poor health

from lack of any cardio work.

In hindsight, I do caution about too much reliance on heavy duty pain meds.

When nothing else worked, my doctor put me on morphine. Big mistake - I was

allergic in all sorts of ways, and when I gave it up after about 6 weeks, I

found that I could not sleep - at all...It was then onto sleeping pills, and

their effect wears off very quickly. It has taken me 10 months to get the stuff

out of my system, and am now beginning to get some sleep. When I gave up the

morphine, I went back onto a Tylenol/ibuprofen combo, which I was able to put up

with, probably because I knew I would soon be having a resurf. Btw, I had been

on Nsaids off and on for approx 13 years, and there is some belief that they

contribute to the deterioration of joints....

I guess the lesson learne is get a resurf as soon as possible, to avoid all the

complications and to get on with living. I wish I had known about it years ago.

If I had waited any longer I would not have been a candidate for it.

When is your surgery?

Sharry

ROM & other things

Hi, folks. I've been reading the messages from folks who wrote about

their ROM diminishing (pre-op). The pain in my leg started years ago.

I didn't have any idea what was causing it, because it manifested

itself as serious lower back pain. The medical community was all

about having back surgery at that time. I flatly refused. And by this

time, the pain was also in my butt, around my groin (big time!) and

in my quad & hamstring. Periformis syndrome?? My muscles got so

twisted in pain, and so locked up from guarding against pain, that my

left hip joint would, literally, have to be popped back into place

just so I could stand up. I kept seeing the chiropractor (which

actually helped), kept moving (which became excruciating). I took

enough ibuprophen to cause bleeding, took all of the NSAI meds known

to the western world, and kept saying to the doc, " I'm still in awful

pain. Is there anything else I could take? " ROM was in serious

jepoardy. My muscles were a mess. Total spasms. Finally one Monday

morning, I plopped myself down in the local ER and told the busy

young doc that I had hit the wall with pain. Xray showed OA in left

hip (bone on bone). He prescribed Vicoden and Flexeril and

Arthrotec. FINALLY!! Pain relief. Blessed pain relief. And I could

still move my leg. I have pretty good ROM when I'm not in pain!! And

have been walking and building up strength. Well, lest the story make

total sense, my family doc (who is really a neat woman), lowered the

strength of the vicoden and now I'm in some pain again. (Had to stop

the Arthrotec for surgery)It seems that I've had to overcome the idea

that a person in pain will automatically become a drug addict if

given pain meds. So because no one wanted me to become a drug addict,

I lived in unnecessary pain for a long time. It is my belief that

when someone is in the kind of pain I've had, those drugs go to the

pain receptors and not the pleasure center of the brain. Yes? Getting

pain free (or almost pain free) with meds shows how much we can still

move our legs. And allows us to keep those muscles strong. Not to

mention that old fashioned notion that it's okay to desire being out

of pain, that in and of itself is a worthy goal. Feedback? p.s. you

all are so dear, thanks for the messages you've sent me for my

upcoming 2/1/04 surgery date. I'm hanging in there. Joyce in Kentucky

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Joyce

I feel so sorry that you had to go through such pain for so long, with no

accurate diagnosis. It goes to show that we must guard ourselves against

overeager surgeons and be persistant in getting the right answers. Fortunately

for me, my symptoms showed up in the hip where, in fact, the problem was,

although I did have awful pain in the sacroiliac joints, which has now

diappeared along with the hip pain, since surgery. I had no ROM to speak of in

the bad hip, and the pain from bone-on-bone movement was causing me to grab any

and all meds I could get, to get some relief. At that time, I had been advised

that a THR was the only procedure available, so I went on a waitlist. That was

3 years ago. Gradually all my atheltic activities had to be dropped, as pain

worsened. This can be so gradual that we don't always realize how much we have

given up and how limited our lives have become. Not to mention, poor health

from lack of any cardio work.

In hindsight, I do caution about too much reliance on heavy duty pain meds.

When nothing else worked, my doctor put me on morphine. Big mistake - I was

allergic in all sorts of ways, and when I gave it up after about 6 weeks, I

found that I could not sleep - at all...It was then onto sleeping pills, and

their effect wears off very quickly. It has taken me 10 months to get the stuff

out of my system, and am now beginning to get some sleep. When I gave up the

morphine, I went back onto a Tylenol/ibuprofen combo, which I was able to put up

with, probably because I knew I would soon be having a resurf. Btw, I had been

on Nsaids off and on for approx 13 years, and there is some belief that they

contribute to the deterioration of joints....

I guess the lesson learne is get a resurf as soon as possible, to avoid all the

complications and to get on with living. I wish I had known about it years ago.

If I had waited any longer I would not have been a candidate for it.

When is your surgery?

Sharry

ROM & other things

Hi, folks. I've been reading the messages from folks who wrote about

their ROM diminishing (pre-op). The pain in my leg started years ago.

I didn't have any idea what was causing it, because it manifested

itself as serious lower back pain. The medical community was all

about having back surgery at that time. I flatly refused. And by this

time, the pain was also in my butt, around my groin (big time!) and

in my quad & hamstring. Periformis syndrome?? My muscles got so

twisted in pain, and so locked up from guarding against pain, that my

left hip joint would, literally, have to be popped back into place

just so I could stand up. I kept seeing the chiropractor (which

actually helped), kept moving (which became excruciating). I took

enough ibuprophen to cause bleeding, took all of the NSAI meds known

to the western world, and kept saying to the doc, " I'm still in awful

pain. Is there anything else I could take? " ROM was in serious

jepoardy. My muscles were a mess. Total spasms. Finally one Monday

morning, I plopped myself down in the local ER and told the busy

young doc that I had hit the wall with pain. Xray showed OA in left

hip (bone on bone). He prescribed Vicoden and Flexeril and

Arthrotec. FINALLY!! Pain relief. Blessed pain relief. And I could

still move my leg. I have pretty good ROM when I'm not in pain!! And

have been walking and building up strength. Well, lest the story make

total sense, my family doc (who is really a neat woman), lowered the

strength of the vicoden and now I'm in some pain again. (Had to stop

the Arthrotec for surgery)It seems that I've had to overcome the idea

that a person in pain will automatically become a drug addict if

given pain meds. So because no one wanted me to become a drug addict,

I lived in unnecessary pain for a long time. It is my belief that

when someone is in the kind of pain I've had, those drugs go to the

pain receptors and not the pleasure center of the brain. Yes? Getting

pain free (or almost pain free) with meds shows how much we can still

move our legs. And allows us to keep those muscles strong. Not to

mention that old fashioned notion that it's okay to desire being out

of pain, that in and of itself is a worthy goal. Feedback? p.s. you

all are so dear, thanks for the messages you've sent me for my

upcoming 2/1/04 surgery date. I'm hanging in there. Joyce in Kentucky

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Joyce

I feel so sorry that you had to go through such pain for so long, with no

accurate diagnosis. It goes to show that we must guard ourselves against

overeager surgeons and be persistant in getting the right answers. Fortunately

for me, my symptoms showed up in the hip where, in fact, the problem was,

although I did have awful pain in the sacroiliac joints, which has now

diappeared along with the hip pain, since surgery. I had no ROM to speak of in

the bad hip, and the pain from bone-on-bone movement was causing me to grab any

and all meds I could get, to get some relief. At that time, I had been advised

that a THR was the only procedure available, so I went on a waitlist. That was

3 years ago. Gradually all my atheltic activities had to be dropped, as pain

worsened. This can be so gradual that we don't always realize how much we have

given up and how limited our lives have become. Not to mention, poor health

from lack of any cardio work.

In hindsight, I do caution about too much reliance on heavy duty pain meds.

When nothing else worked, my doctor put me on morphine. Big mistake - I was

allergic in all sorts of ways, and when I gave it up after about 6 weeks, I

found that I could not sleep - at all...It was then onto sleeping pills, and

their effect wears off very quickly. It has taken me 10 months to get the stuff

out of my system, and am now beginning to get some sleep. When I gave up the

morphine, I went back onto a Tylenol/ibuprofen combo, which I was able to put up

with, probably because I knew I would soon be having a resurf. Btw, I had been

on Nsaids off and on for approx 13 years, and there is some belief that they

contribute to the deterioration of joints....

I guess the lesson learne is get a resurf as soon as possible, to avoid all the

complications and to get on with living. I wish I had known about it years ago.

If I had waited any longer I would not have been a candidate for it.

When is your surgery?

Sharry

ROM & other things

Hi, folks. I've been reading the messages from folks who wrote about

their ROM diminishing (pre-op). The pain in my leg started years ago.

I didn't have any idea what was causing it, because it manifested

itself as serious lower back pain. The medical community was all

about having back surgery at that time. I flatly refused. And by this

time, the pain was also in my butt, around my groin (big time!) and

in my quad & hamstring. Periformis syndrome?? My muscles got so

twisted in pain, and so locked up from guarding against pain, that my

left hip joint would, literally, have to be popped back into place

just so I could stand up. I kept seeing the chiropractor (which

actually helped), kept moving (which became excruciating). I took

enough ibuprophen to cause bleeding, took all of the NSAI meds known

to the western world, and kept saying to the doc, " I'm still in awful

pain. Is there anything else I could take? " ROM was in serious

jepoardy. My muscles were a mess. Total spasms. Finally one Monday

morning, I plopped myself down in the local ER and told the busy

young doc that I had hit the wall with pain. Xray showed OA in left

hip (bone on bone). He prescribed Vicoden and Flexeril and

Arthrotec. FINALLY!! Pain relief. Blessed pain relief. And I could

still move my leg. I have pretty good ROM when I'm not in pain!! And

have been walking and building up strength. Well, lest the story make

total sense, my family doc (who is really a neat woman), lowered the

strength of the vicoden and now I'm in some pain again. (Had to stop

the Arthrotec for surgery)It seems that I've had to overcome the idea

that a person in pain will automatically become a drug addict if

given pain meds. So because no one wanted me to become a drug addict,

I lived in unnecessary pain for a long time. It is my belief that

when someone is in the kind of pain I've had, those drugs go to the

pain receptors and not the pleasure center of the brain. Yes? Getting

pain free (or almost pain free) with meds shows how much we can still

move our legs. And allows us to keep those muscles strong. Not to

mention that old fashioned notion that it's okay to desire being out

of pain, that in and of itself is a worthy goal. Feedback? p.s. you

all are so dear, thanks for the messages you've sent me for my

upcoming 2/1/04 surgery date. I'm hanging in there. Joyce in Kentucky

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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Hi, buddy. That's interesting about ibuprofen maybe contributing to this joint

break down. Wouldn't surprise me. It's not that I think docs should give out

any and all sorts of heavy pain stuff -- but I do think some of them think pain

sufferers are just trying to get a " buzz " or " take the easy way out. " Whatever

they think THAT means.

Anyway, I'm getting resurfed by Dr. Gross, in South Carolina. My sister and I

are driving down tomorrow, surgery on Monday morning.

I think I contributed to my own lack of timely diagnosis because I'm essentially

the sort of person who stays far away from the medical establishment if I can.

I'm not at all " anti doctor, " but have learned that usually there are other,

less toxic & traumatic ways to deal with most stuff. Believe me, I entirely

grateful that the medical community has done what it has for many human sorts of

conditions -- resurfacing being at the top of the list.

Anyway, I just was staggered by the way my ROM improved without so much pain.

And amazed at how long I was able to just keep going before I knew what the heck

was going on.

Wish me luck, buddy. And thanks for the good words. Joyce

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Hi, buddy. That's interesting about ibuprofen maybe contributing to this joint

break down. Wouldn't surprise me. It's not that I think docs should give out

any and all sorts of heavy pain stuff -- but I do think some of them think pain

sufferers are just trying to get a " buzz " or " take the easy way out. " Whatever

they think THAT means.

Anyway, I'm getting resurfed by Dr. Gross, in South Carolina. My sister and I

are driving down tomorrow, surgery on Monday morning.

I think I contributed to my own lack of timely diagnosis because I'm essentially

the sort of person who stays far away from the medical establishment if I can.

I'm not at all " anti doctor, " but have learned that usually there are other,

less toxic & traumatic ways to deal with most stuff. Believe me, I entirely

grateful that the medical community has done what it has for many human sorts of

conditions -- resurfacing being at the top of the list.

Anyway, I just was staggered by the way my ROM improved without so much pain.

And amazed at how long I was able to just keep going before I knew what the heck

was going on.

Wish me luck, buddy. And thanks for the good words. Joyce

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Hi, buddy. That's interesting about ibuprofen maybe contributing to this joint

break down. Wouldn't surprise me. It's not that I think docs should give out

any and all sorts of heavy pain stuff -- but I do think some of them think pain

sufferers are just trying to get a " buzz " or " take the easy way out. " Whatever

they think THAT means.

Anyway, I'm getting resurfed by Dr. Gross, in South Carolina. My sister and I

are driving down tomorrow, surgery on Monday morning.

I think I contributed to my own lack of timely diagnosis because I'm essentially

the sort of person who stays far away from the medical establishment if I can.

I'm not at all " anti doctor, " but have learned that usually there are other,

less toxic & traumatic ways to deal with most stuff. Believe me, I entirely

grateful that the medical community has done what it has for many human sorts of

conditions -- resurfacing being at the top of the list.

Anyway, I just was staggered by the way my ROM improved without so much pain.

And amazed at how long I was able to just keep going before I knew what the heck

was going on.

Wish me luck, buddy. And thanks for the good words. Joyce

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Joyce,

Don't worry if you don't have a 'quick' recovery. You'll have whatever

recovery your body needs. Rejoice and let it do what it needs,

remembering that ultimately it can only get better and better. Go with

the flow. Good luck. Your 'life' will expand. Looking forward to

hearing your experience.

Eleanor

London England 11/26/03 now almost 9 weeks and finally things are

starting to really be different.

Re: ROM & other things

I'm leaving this morning for S. C. One thing about the pain -- it

wonderfully focuses the effort & determination to do something about

this! Jeeze, buddy, I read the posts about quick recoveries and pray

that I, too, have that experience. Yesterday, out doing errands to get

ready for this trip, I could barely make it in and out of Wal-Mart, even

with heavily leaning on my cane. My " life " shrinks around me.

I'll be back when I'm post-op -- and steadily working towards expanding

my world again.

Thanks -- many, many thanks. Joyce

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