Thursday 24 July 2014

Humerus? Not so funny, really....


Today, I had an interesting experience.  Just before we moved from the old house, I had become aware of a shoulder injury, pain, ache, restriction of movement. so I treated it with ibuprofen, tried not to do the ouchy stuff, like lifting my arm high or rotating it outward, assuming whatever I'd done while shifting heavy boxes and furniture would heal on its own. 5+ months  later, I'm forced to admit that it won't.
So I went to see a doctor, and was referred to a sports medicine clinic, where after examination and x-rays, I was told I have a displaced shoulder joint, caused by a rotator-cuff injury.


So today I was having an MRI scan, to show the exact nature and extent of the damage.
First (well, after a clipboard worth of forms and an eye-watering financial transaction), I was
positioned under an x-ray machine, while a doctor pumped my shoulder joint full of a gadolinium contrast fluid. There was some anaesthesia too, so the needle sliding into the shoulder joint capsule was not too bad, but it's wearing off now and I'd like to bite somebody.
But the MRI.... Magnetic Resonance Imaging... Essentially, you're shoved into a very small hole in a large doughnut. And surrounded by a humongously powerful magnetic field It's certainly powerful enough to suck steel furniture in...




 Pictures via http://simplyphysics.com/flying_objects.html

You are carefully positioned, warned that it's noisy, given earplugs and industrial earmuffs, the operator leaves the room, and a noisy chaos begins. I was told that about ten percent of people are so claustrophobic they can't tolerate it. Well, I've been a plumber. I've gone through holes in floors, walls and ceilings, where there's no room to turn round or roll over.  And I've weaseled myself into tight spaces under vehicles and in engine bays, where despite not being able to move much, I've been trying to weld, or undo a gearbox's bolts. 
So, as the magnetic field oscillated my hydrogen atoms, for what seemed a long time, I was drowsing and comfortably musing about all manner of unimportant trivia.
This procedure was quite untroubling, if you're ever referred for one, it's not something to be scared of.

The scan results will go straight to my doctor, and in a couple of days I should get an appointment to find out what's next. But, he's already told me, it'll probably mean surgery. 

Sigh.

In the meantime, more ibuprofen and on with the painting of walls!

16 comments:

  1. Ouch! What more can I say other than "ouch!" I hope it gets fixed up for you soon...so you can go back to your painting without pain!!!

    Take care of your shoulder....it's obvious you're doing your best to do so. :)

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    1. Well, today, I was going to take the front off the Subaru to get at the leaking screenwash pump. I'll leave it a while...

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  2. Oh baby! I had my left one done August of 2012, and the right one done last January! I got all sorts of advice!

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    1. How long after surgery before you can use it?
      I need your reports and reviews!

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    2. For my left shoulder, I was unloading a truck after 3 months. I wasnt supposed to, but I was. I do an office job, so I was back to work after three weeks, no lifting.They say a UPS driver is out for six months. It generally takes four months before you can really do what you want to do without concern you are going to retear it. From there its just using good discretion, paying attention to what you are doing, and how it feels.
      After the surgery most people are in a lot of pain for a month. Me, it was just a couple days.
      they will suggest you get a recliner, and yeah, they are right. Good for sleeping. Laying down in a bed is hard on the shoulder.
      They will also suggest a cold water circulation system machine, and an electric TENS unit. The circulation system worked well for me, its was indisoensible....kept the pain and swelling down and also provides some support as a brace. The TENS units cost $1000 and are worthless to me.
      They had me start the PT the day after my surgery, and I was really good about following my excercise program at home.
      I think you have my ph #. Call me anytime buddy!

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    3. Oh, both of my tears were caused in part by bone spurs where the chromium (collarbone) sits on the joint, and from the humerous head. They removed the spurs. Also on my left shoulder, the bicep was actually out of a slot it was supposed to sit in. I'm certain neither shoulder would have gotten better without the surgery. The left had bothered me for years. I kept thinking it would "Go Away"...it didnt.

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  3. surgery, NO! You always hear rotater cuff injuries are common in famous baseball pitchers... you are in good company, perhaps?

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    1. I've never pitched a baseball, but I'm told it's common in golfers too. Now I don't play golf, but this area is infested with golf courses and golfers, so I'll bet i caught it off one of them.
      No, I'm careful to avoid sports of all kinds, because they're unhealthy and bad for the body.. the inventor of jogging died while jogging.
      The tech told me they had eight rotator injuries to scan yesterday, so it's big business. Mucho dinero.

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  4. I feel your pain! I had a torn right rotator cuff and opted not to have surgery. I went for physiotherapy three days a week for many months. When it finally healed the left one tore.

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  5. If you think the MRI bill was high, wait for the surgery bill ...

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    1. I'm learning. The day before the MRI I had a dentist visit. The money guy showed me the printout with costs apportioned, what they charge the insurer, what I pay etc. I have bought cars for less.

      The fact that the waiting rooms have catalogues for Rolex and lifestyle magazines advertising multi-million dollar ranches gives a clue to what medical providers consider their due.
      I could go off into a diatribe here, but I'll just bang my head against the wall. Maybe I should fly back to europe to have it done.

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    2. My out of pocket was about 1850, includes the 1500 deductible. I have kick ass insurance though.

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    3. And that includes the PT too.

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  6. You should have visited a hospital while 'visiting Yorkshire.'
    The Yank surgeon will see you as a wallet!

    Good luck with that, surgery might be quicker than physio mind.

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  7. Soub, I was thinking that too ; although a second opinion may be helpful. Many just want to start cutting rather than try some rehab and monitoring of the affected area.

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  8. I agree about MRI. I think I had a rotator cuff injury but never went to the doc about it. In the end it kind of improved. I hope you are over your operation by now.

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