noharleyyet
Well-known member
Any you guys had this performed for sciatic relief & lower back pain?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I had a laminectomy done two years ago, and for a few months things were better. Then, when I stood up, I couldn't feel my legs for 30 seconds or more. The surgeon recommended a double-fusion surgery in my lower back (L-1, L4-5). I had the procedure done last July and have regretted it ever since. I can stand up and feel my legs now but my lower back feels like it is tied up by an enormous hose, pain in the right leg, numbness in my right foot. Of course, some of this was present before the surgery. I have tried physical therapy, acupuncture...nothing really works. I hope to see a different surgeon later this year, get an MRI done and see what he says.
Damn anything with that many big words in it sounds scary.Hope all goes well and you get some relief.
P.S.
If you think there is a chance that a swift kick in the butt would straighten your back up all you have to do is ask.
My surgeon told me I had the lumbar region of a 62 year old....in big words. We talked quite a bit about hunting the mountains as a long term prognosis but he wouldn't go so far as to guaranteeing premium unit draws for me.![]()
Sounds like you should find another sawbones and get a second opinion. Guaranteed tags should be part of any prognosis.
Sounds like you should find another sawbones and get a second opinion. Guaranteed tags should be part of any prognosis.
idnative: I already had the right hip replaced six years ago, the knee three years ago.
Harley: Thanks for the well wishes. I used to be able to walk the ass off 90 percent of the guys my age, but not any more.
No Harley, hope the kinks get ironed out; it's no fun getting old. Had I known I was going to live this long I'd have taken better care of myself.
I go in on March 20th for an ablation procedure on my heart. Catheters run up both groins, three in all, one of which will be used to fry the openings of all four pulmonary arteries with RF energy. The idea is to get scar tissue to form which will block the triggers which cause my heart to go out of rhythm so I don't have to take this highly toxic med I'm on and maybe come off the anticoagulant too. Looks good on paper, and my electrophysiologist assures me he hasn't lost a patient yet or had anyone get a stroke, so if it works maybe I'll experience something akin to normal life for a while; if not I'll be drooling on my shirt.