I finally had my shoulder surgery April 13, nearly 8 weeks following "the accident". The delay was necessary to allow repair of my many other injuries not the least of which was the punctured lung and fractured hip, scapula, and ribs. During that delay I also had a plastic surgeon remove the soup bowl sized hematoma from my left thigh that had formed its own bursa. The shoulder surgeon found a "mess" in the rotator cuff of my left shoulder including complete tears of the Supraspinatus and Subscapularis muscle tendons, and a partial tear of the Long bicep muscle tendon. In less than 2 1/2 hours I had the rotator cuff area cleaned out and anchors implanted in the humerus and the tendons sutured. Surgery was performed under a general with a nerve blocker and Oxycontin prescribed for after surgery pain relief. I weaned off the opiate as soon as possible.
5 HOLE SURGERY |
Following shoulder surgery I had my right hand index finger examined by a hand surgeon because the last digit no longer would bend. Turns out the accident gave me a "jersey finger" injury, so named because it typically happens in football when the tackler tries to hold on to the opponents jersey only to have the finger tendon rupture. If treated shortly after injury, the tendon can often be reattached. In my situation, the tendon has shriveled up into the palm of the hand and the "tunnel" it had traversed through absorbed. The most practical options remaining are do nothing and adapt or fuse the last digit into a partial bend. I need to ponder these options a bit.
So there it is. All the literature and medical advice indicate a 6 to 12 month recovery is typical following surgery. So, from now on its mostly therapy and unfortunately a slow process through recovery. However, I will be following the Kona race and wishing all the best to the Minnesota and Arizona participants, as well as those friendly competitors in the M70-74 age group. Mahalo.
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