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I'm not sure how successful you will be at sueing your surgeon if you

signed the informed consent form. There really aren't any guarantees

that this surgery will eliminate or improve TMJ issues. The odds are

usually pretty good that it will, but you and a few others I've heard

of have had difficulties afterwards.

I have a friend who had nonstop pain in her jaw on one side, starting

about 4 months postop. She had some trouble getting either her

surgeon or her ortho to recognize this, and of course neither one

wanted to accept any responsibility for it. She's now had a second

surgery (changed her ortho, kept the surgeon, who was also my

surgeon), her open bite which wasn't closed as of the first surgery

is now pretty much closed, and she says she only has pain at the

moment when functioning (chewing, yawning, etc.) rather than 24x7.

She's going to have some more acupuncture treatment in that area, she

feels that has helped. Her old ortho kicked in some $$ towards her

new ortho's costs, and the surgeon did the second surgery at no cost

to her - usually we pay only out-of-hospital fees for post-op care

(although I'm sure he billed the provincial insurance plan for his

time).

My advice would be to start communicating with your surgeon, that

things are pretty bad, why, what can he/she do about it? Same deal

with your ortho. Start with the people you know, expand it to consult

with others if necessary.

Sure you can sue, but $$ is not going to make the pain go away, and

that's surely what you want, isn't it?

Good luck,

> I am almost one year post-op and am having so much pain in my left

> jaw that I have been off work now for 6 weeks. Has anyone

> successfully sued their surgeon? I am pursuing legal action and

could

> use some advice.

> Mike

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I'm not sure how successful you will be at sueing your surgeon if you

signed the informed consent form. There really aren't any guarantees

that this surgery will eliminate or improve TMJ issues. The odds are

usually pretty good that it will, but you and a few others I've heard

of have had difficulties afterwards.

I have a friend who had nonstop pain in her jaw on one side, starting

about 4 months postop. She had some trouble getting either her

surgeon or her ortho to recognize this, and of course neither one

wanted to accept any responsibility for it. She's now had a second

surgery (changed her ortho, kept the surgeon, who was also my

surgeon), her open bite which wasn't closed as of the first surgery

is now pretty much closed, and she says she only has pain at the

moment when functioning (chewing, yawning, etc.) rather than 24x7.

She's going to have some more acupuncture treatment in that area, she

feels that has helped. Her old ortho kicked in some $$ towards her

new ortho's costs, and the surgeon did the second surgery at no cost

to her - usually we pay only out-of-hospital fees for post-op care

(although I'm sure he billed the provincial insurance plan for his

time).

My advice would be to start communicating with your surgeon, that

things are pretty bad, why, what can he/she do about it? Same deal

with your ortho. Start with the people you know, expand it to consult

with others if necessary.

Sure you can sue, but $$ is not going to make the pain go away, and

that's surely what you want, isn't it?

Good luck,

> I am almost one year post-op and am having so much pain in my left

> jaw that I have been off work now for 6 weeks. Has anyone

> successfully sued their surgeon? I am pursuing legal action and

could

> use some advice.

> Mike

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I'm not sure how successful you will be at sueing your surgeon if you

signed the informed consent form. There really aren't any guarantees

that this surgery will eliminate or improve TMJ issues. The odds are

usually pretty good that it will, but you and a few others I've heard

of have had difficulties afterwards.

I have a friend who had nonstop pain in her jaw on one side, starting

about 4 months postop. She had some trouble getting either her

surgeon or her ortho to recognize this, and of course neither one

wanted to accept any responsibility for it. She's now had a second

surgery (changed her ortho, kept the surgeon, who was also my

surgeon), her open bite which wasn't closed as of the first surgery

is now pretty much closed, and she says she only has pain at the

moment when functioning (chewing, yawning, etc.) rather than 24x7.

She's going to have some more acupuncture treatment in that area, she

feels that has helped. Her old ortho kicked in some $$ towards her

new ortho's costs, and the surgeon did the second surgery at no cost

to her - usually we pay only out-of-hospital fees for post-op care

(although I'm sure he billed the provincial insurance plan for his

time).

My advice would be to start communicating with your surgeon, that

things are pretty bad, why, what can he/she do about it? Same deal

with your ortho. Start with the people you know, expand it to consult

with others if necessary.

Sure you can sue, but $$ is not going to make the pain go away, and

that's surely what you want, isn't it?

Good luck,

> I am almost one year post-op and am having so much pain in my left

> jaw that I have been off work now for 6 weeks. Has anyone

> successfully sued their surgeon? I am pursuing legal action and

could

> use some advice.

> Mike

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> > I am almost one year post-op and am having so much pain in my

left

> > jaw that I have been off work now for 6 weeks. Has anyone

> > successfully sued their surgeon? I am pursuing legal action and

> could

> > use some advice.

> > Mike

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> > I am almost one year post-op and am having so much pain in my

left

> > jaw that I have been off work now for 6 weeks. Has anyone

> > successfully sued their surgeon? I am pursuing legal action and

> could

> > use some advice.

> > Mike

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Hi,

It sounds like you've got quite a group of professionals working on

your case! I'm glad you mentioned BC, though. I do recall that one

member here (protrusiveprofile, from Vancouver) did switch surgeons

after finding out her original surgeon had been named in a lawsuit

(she ended up having a successful surgery). You could try searching

some of her earliest posts for the name, and I also think she

mentioned that there is a public listing in BC of lawsuits that you

could also check.

I'm sorry about your situation, and I hope you get some relief from

your pain.

Fellow Canuck (north of Toronto)

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