I have rotator and bicep tears and will be having surgery in January. Any advice for those who have had it done?
@RedCloudI have rotator and bicep tears and will be having surgery in January. Any advice for those who have had it done?
If it's your dominant arm start using the other arm to practice wiping now. Get your physical therapy lined up as soon as you can. Do the at home exercises they tell you to do (frozen shoulder is no joke) pain meds are prescribed for a reason so take them. I always made sure I had taken one about 30 minutes before therapy so they would be working during and after my session.I have rotator and bicep tears and will be having surgery in January. Any advice for those who have had it done?
I slept on my couch for maybe a week. We didn't have a recliner at the time. Figured out that if I laid a pillow down along my side to keep my arm from falling down beside me I could sleep in bed on my back. Hooked a rope to the bottom of the footboard so I could pull with my other arm and help get to a sitting position. I then could turn and get my legs on the floor to stand up.You’ll have to sleep in a recliner for a few months. Also, DO NOT push yourself with the torn bicep. Once they repair it, if you overdo it lifting stuff while it is still healing, you may tear it from its anchor. The doctor told me that if you tear it from its anchor, you will have a “Popeye” look on your arm and there isn’t a way to fix it. I had a 95% tear on my bicep, and it was torn at the top as opposed to the bottom (where most tears occur). After hearing that, I took it easy and when lifting stuff, if you feel pain, stop lifting. You’ll eventually get there. Therapy is very important as they will know how hard to push you in recovery. At first, you won’t even be able to lift a cup of coffee with the affected arm. A year after surgery, you won’t have any pain at all, but you will notice a loss of strength, and I don’t think that will ever come back. The rotator cuff recovery isn’t as bad and it’ll feel as good as new. Good luck.
They offered me a block but after hearing the possible side effects (can’t remember what they were) I decided against it. I’m also leery of pain meds but I did take the meds for the first day or two, then nothing. Really only felt pain when I would try to use the arm.For the surgery if they offer you a block (and unless you have a lot of other medical issues they SHOULD) take it. If they know how to do one you should be virtually pain free for the first 24-36 hours if not out to 48+.
They offered me a block but after hearing the possible side effects (can’t remember what they were) I decided against it. I’m also leery of pain meds but I did take the meds for the first day or two, then nothing. Really only felt pain when I would try to use the arm.
If the block didn't work at all then you unfortunately had a provider that didn't put the numbing medication in the correct spot, especially if it had worked on the other side. I'm sorry about that. I routinely do these procedures with absolutely no narcotics needed by the patient for their entire hospital or surgery center time. The blocks decrease the amount of anesthesia needed so much that the patients are often leaving well under an hour after they are done, just get some vital signs, a snack, change into street clothes and head home.I had both done about 12 years ago. 7 tears in the right and 5 in the left. They also ground down some bone spurs and scar tissue, it was not fun.
The pain block worked great on the first one, the second it did not work at all. I had to take oxy before I could leave the hospital, the pain was pretty bad.