Limb Lengthening Forum
Limb Lengthening Surgery => Limb Lengthening Discussions => Topic started by: Dirona on August 06, 2022, 05:19:37 AM
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Hey folks,
I read a lot of papers yesterday related to non-union in fractures. It occurs in almost 20 percent from what I hear. And out of them, many heal without surgery. Some heal with surgery after a pretty long time. And some do not heal at all. Even though osteotomy is done carefully in LL, but still that risk is there that can lead to permanent disability. Please weight in that before you take the plunge. If anyone has counter arguments to this, I am all ears.
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Great article : https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK554385/
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i dont think you should stress about non union in current year all that much, if at all
risks for non union:
1. betzbone - mechanical nail that cannot be reversed if you do get non union, would require additional surgery and changing of the nail i.e. could turn out quite costly(unicorn case with guichet nail is the most famous example of a non union disaster, 60k initial surgery followed by 100k more in complications)
2. user hasaki here was left with non union by livelifetaller which is absolutely mind boggling how it could have been allowed as multiple xrays had been done over months and noone saw the non union
if you do external/lon and get non union you just reverse the frame back and address the non union by re-damaging the both ends in order to create a blood clot which would turn into callus and then assess why it happened in the first place. speed of lengthening is the main culprit, next to age, smoking, alcohol, lack of sleep etc
also obviously with precice nails non union can be addressed the same way
embolism and trombosis are the big ones to worry about with femur surgeries, and to a lesser extent with tibia
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i dont think you should stress about non union in current year all that much, if at all
risks for non union:
1. betzbone - mechanical nail that cannot be reversed if you do get non union, would require additional surgery and changing of the nail i.e. could turn out quite costly(unicorn case with guichet nail is the most famous example of a non union disaster, 60k initial surgery followed by 100k more in complications)
2. user hasaki here was left with non union by livelifetaller which is absolutely mind boggling how it could have been allowed as multiple xrays had been done over months and noone saw the non union
if you do external/lon and get non union you just reverse the frame back and address the non union by re-damaging the both ends in order to create a blood clot which would turn into callus and then assess why it happened in the first place. speed of lengthening is the main culprit, next to age, smoking, alcohol, lack of sleep etc
also obviously with precice nails non union can be addressed the same way
embolism and trombosis are the big ones to worry about with femur surgeries, and to a lesser extent with tibia
Hey bro, I respect your opinion A lot based on your contribution to the forum…
I sent you a PM message
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i dont think you should stress about non union in current year all that much, if at all
risks for non union:
1. betzbone - mechanical nail that cannot be reversed if you do get non union, would require additional surgery and changing of the nail i.e. could turn out quite costly(unicorn case with guichet nail is the most famous example of a non union disaster, 60k initial surgery followed by 100k more in complications)
2. user hasaki here was left with non union by livelifetaller which is absolutely mind boggling how it could have been allowed as multiple xrays had been done over months and noone saw the non union
if you do external/lon and get non union you just reverse the frame back and address the non union by re-damaging the both ends in order to create a blood clot which would turn into callus and then assess why it happened in the first place. speed of lengthening is the main culprit, next to age, smoking, alcohol, lack of sleep etc
also obviously with precice nails non union can be addressed the same way
embolism and trombosis are the big ones to worry about with femur surgeries, and to a lesser extent with tibia
The reason I do not worry about embolism and thrombosis is I will be dead and not be limping for the rest of my life..I prefer being dead over being disabled if you understand what i am saying..
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The reason I do not worry about embolism and thrombosis is I will be dead and not be limping for the rest of my life..I prefer being dead over being disabled if you understand what i am saying..
you have an interesting thought process
given these two choices - death or limping, i personally would choose limping
why do you think non union automatically means "life long limping"
non union is not a difficult complication to heal - if caught on time. if you get Xrays every 2-3 weeks it can be caught quite early and treated immediately
risk factors for non union:
1. extending too fast - lifelivetaller's 1.5mm-2mm a day extending protocols as an example
2. extending too early after osteotomy - minimum 7-10 days for the blood clot from the first surgery to become a rubbery bloodless callus that can be pulled apart like a bubble gum
3. doctor using only a hammer without a chisel and completely shattering the bones in the osteotomy leading to a bunch of small fragments instead of one clean break
4. lack of sleep due to stress and discomfort and pain
5. not enough calories due to lack of appetite
6. not enough protein that builds the callus
7. not enough calcium that builds the callus
8. drinking alcohol - vasoconstrictor
9. smoking cigarettes - impairs healing
10. age - older you are the slower you heal
11. having underlying chronic diseases - aids, autoimmune stuff, diabetes, etc - 99% of doctors wont operate on you if any of these are present
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Hey bro, I respect your opinion A lot based on your contribution to the forum…
I sent you a PM message
yes i saw your private message but my stance has not changed - you need to wait 6 months for your trauma to heal before stressing about permanent knee pain
as i said, you have 4 broken bones with 1 cm gaps, had both knee tendons cut with scalpel and had 2 30cm steel rods hammered into your shin bones
its a lot of trauma at once, you need to let the body heal
i saw your xray and it doesnt look like the IM nails are protruding from the tibia bone and rubbing your tendon from the back which is what usually brings knee pain
id suggest you soak your legs in your bathtub with hot water for 30 minutes every time before doing your 1-2 hours of walking therapy and then soak them again for another 30 minutes
also buy yourself elastic knee support like what tennis players use
heal for 6 months and then tell us what happened with the knee pain
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you have an interesting thought process
given these two choices - death or limping, i personally would choose limping
why do you think non union automatically means "life long limping"
non union is not a difficult complication to heal - if caught on time. if you get Xrays every 2-3 weeks it can be caught quite early and treated immediately
risk factors for non union:
1. extending too fast - lifelivetaller's 1.5mm-2mm a day extending protocols as an example
2. extending too early after osteotomy - minimum 7-10 days for the blood clot from the first surgery to become a rubbery bloodless callus that can be pulled apart like a bubble gum
3. doctor using only a hammer without a chisel and completely shattering the bones in the osteotomy leading to a bunch of small fragments instead of one clean break
4. lack of sleep due to stress and discomfort and pain
5. not enough calories due to lack of appetite
6. not enough protein that builds the callus
7. not enough calcium that builds the callus
8. drinking alcohol - vasoconstrictor
9. smoking cigarettes - impairs healing
10. age - older you are the slower you heal
11. having underlying chronic diseases - aids, autoimmune stuff, diabetes, etc - 99% of doctors wont operate on you if any of these are present
Thanks man for the info..How old is too old in your opinion? Under 40 is still alright I think? Dr Donghoon Lee has never had even 1 non-union..So osteotomy process plays a role as well I guess.
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I am one of those unlucky cases that have a much slower callus formation, I believe we could call it a delayed union. I was told to first slow down from 1mm/day to 0,75mm for two weeks, now I have been instructed to do 0,5mm for another 2weeks after my X-ray showing barely any improvement. At this point I think the culprit is simply just genetics, stress/anxiety and possibly lack of deep/REM sleep since I wake up every other hour.
I am in my early twenties, have never smoked and overall healthy.
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I am one of those unlucky cases that have a much slower callus formation, I believe we could call it a delayed union. I was told to first slow down from 1mm/day to 0,75mm for two weeks, now I have been instructed to do 0,5mm for another 2weeks after my X-ray showing barely any improvement. At this point I think the culprit is simply just genetics, stress/anxiety and possibly lack of deep/REM sleep since I wake up every other hour.
I am in my early twenties, have never smoked and overall healthy.
Stay strong man..Still early days..Wish you a speedy recovery.. Who is your doc? Is he confident of treating this complication?
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Stay strong man..Still early days..Wish you a speedy recovery.. Who is your doc? Is he confident of treating this complication?
My doctor is Dr Mustafa Uysal, he is competent and assured me it isn’t non union since my xrays show some callus albeit not very much. I have reached 4.5cm and have my next xray in 2 days. Fingers crossed there is some improvement, I really don’t wanna reverse lengthen lol…
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My doctor is Dr Mustafa Uysal, he is competent and assured me it isn’t non union since my xrays show some callus albeit not very much. I have reached 4.5cm and have my next xray in 2 days. Fingers crossed there is some improvement, I really don’t wanna reverse lengthen lol…
Awesome!
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Any updates?
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you have an interesting thought process
given these two choices - death or limping, i personally would choose limping
why do you think non union automatically means "life long limping"
non union is not a difficult complication to heal - if caught on time. if you get Xrays every 2-3 weeks it can be caught quite early and treated immediately
risk factors for non union:
1. extending too fast - lifelivetaller's 1.5mm-2mm a day extending protocols as an example
2. extending too early after osteotomy - minimum 7-10 days for the blood clot from the first surgery to become a rubbery bloodless callus that can be pulled apart like a bubble gum
3. doctor using only a hammer without a chisel and completely shattering the bones in the osteotomy leading to a bunch of small fragments instead of one clean break
4. lack of sleep due to stress and discomfort and pain
5. not enough calories due to lack of appetite
6. not enough protein that builds the callus
7. not enough calcium that builds the callus
8. drinking alcohol - vasoconstrictor
9. smoking cigarettes - impairs healing
10. age - older you are the slower you heal
11. having underlying chronic diseases - aids, autoimmune stuff, diabetes, etc - 99% of doctors wont operate on you if any of these are present
Hello, I am new to this site but you seem to be very knowledgeable.
What did you mean that a non union is not difficult to heal? I was told that the only way to heal it is via bone grafting and if that doesn't succeed, permanent limp or amputation it is.
Also, do we have a recorded case of a non union in LL of a healthy person that never healed despite the proper distraction rate?
Thanks.