Guys Dig Scars?

Two weeks after surgery I graduated from a cast to a boot! Yeah! Since I can now see my wound and swollen foot I wanted to share its awesomeness, or rather grossness, with you. Enjoy!

Where the doctor sliced me.
Where the doctor sliced me-two weeks later
My foot two weeks after surgery.
My frakenfoot
Guess which one is the bad one.
My swollen ankle
My two feet
Poor lefty

The Ridiculousness of Crutches

Do you remember as a child how you thought it would be so much fun to break something and get a cast or get to use crutches? You imagined no doubt that this would get you endless attention, treats, and special privileges. You would of course get to skip your chores, and, if you were lucky enough to break your right arm, maybe you would even get out of doing homework. This seemed like an ideal situation, right? Well, now after my first cast/crutches experience let me tell you…your childhood self was stupid, stupid, stupid!

My cast is enormous!
My cast is enormous!

After surgery I was stuck in bed per the doctor’s orders: foot elevated, doped up, and lethargic.

After a few days of watching bits of movies between drug and exhaustion induced napping, I was feeling better and ready to start using my crutches for more than just going to the bathroom.

My litte toes in my big cast.
My little toes in my big cast.

Now that I have been using these annoying devices for a couple weeks I have realized that they, along with my enormous purple cast, make everything ridiculously hard to do. Only those who have been forced to use crutches and cope with a cast can truly understand the magnitude of this annoyance. Since this has been my first experience with casts and crutches I had no idea just how much they would drive me crazy!

Me seeking some sanity from a ride in the mountains.
Me seeking some sanity from a ride in the mountains.

For those of you who have never had this joyous experience let me help you visualize how your life on crutches would be. Imagine you have no hands (You can’t hold anything, duh…you are holding your crutches.) and that you have only one leg. In place of your second leg you have a deadweight that is tender, heavy, cumbersome, and useless. Now imagine trying to go about your daily tasks with your one useful appendage. You want to go shopping? Good luck. How are you going to hold your purse? How are you going to walk around a huge store? How are you going to push your cart? Or perhaps you just want to stay at home and take a nice hot shower. Well, too bad, you can’t. Unless you want to cover your cast with a garbage bag, tape the top to your skin with an overabundance of duct tape, try to somehow maintain your balance on one leg as you shampoo and soap up, all the while holding your other leg in an extremely awkward position in a useless attempt to keep your cast dry, only to realize in the end that you still got it wet and have to spend the next hour, following your exhausting shower, blow drying it. Sounds fun doesn’t it?

Yes, let me assure you, casts and crutches are not worth getting out of doing your chores.

Here are some of the more frustrating things about this unwieldy duo:

Stairs the Rachel way.
Stairs the Rachel way.

Stairs:

Since we have a two-story house I regularly have to go up and down the stairs. I have found that the easiest and safest way to do this is by sliding on my bum, dragging my crutches in one hand and balancing myself with the other. It looks and feels completely silly, and wears me out.

Our friend Jacob doing stairs an unsafe way.
Our friend Jacob doing stairs an unsafe way.

Bathing:

If you have a cast or are getting one on your leg it is my solemn recommendation that you do not try to take a shower while casted. No matter what you do, no matter how many rubber bands and rolls of duct tape you use, no matter if you triple bag it, no matter what! If you take a shower with a cast your cast will almost inevitably get wet. I bagged, banded, and taped my leg absolutely comical amounts and still my cast somehow ended up wet. My suggestion is that instead of a shower, you take a bath. While bathing is still obnoxiously difficult, it requires less effort than a shower and is not nearly as risky as far as cast wetting goes. I recommend you follow this procedure when bathing with a cast on your leg: bag and tape your cast, have some sympathetic volunteer (that your are willing to let see your blubber) assist you in getting into the tub (If you don’t have any acquaintances that fit this description, good luck getting into the bath without assistance.), put your casted leg up on the side of the tub, fill the tub (I advise not getting the bath too full so you don’t risk getting your cast wet.), bath, drain the water, then seek help in getting back out again.

Jas blow drying my cast after my first showering attempt.
Jas blow drying my cast after my first showering attempt.

Carrying Anything:

If you have crutches there is only one way, and one way only, to carry an item thicker than a piece of paper-hopping. Yes, that’s right; you put your crutches down, pick your item up, lift up your decrepit leg and hop on your good leg until you reach your desired destination. This is hard work, if you don’t believe me give it a try, you will be panting in no time. Last week I had to transfer a vase of flowers a coworker had kindly given me from my car to the kitchen sink, to get some water for the thirsty flowers, and then to the living room where I wanted to display it. Since no one else was home to help me I was forced to hop all that way. Good thing I’m in shape is all I can say. I have hopped more in the last two weeks than I have the entire rest of my life put together.

Sleeping:

Simply put, sleep doesn’t happen. In the last two weeks I have been up tossing and turning in bed until 5 AM or later nearly every night. An uncomfortable position and an uncomfortable leg are not conducive to sleeping.

I have been trying to figure out some cure for this dilemma, taking Advil PM seems to help.

Writing my post
Writing my post

Having a cast and crutches does get me out of doing my chores and many of my normal daily tasks so I guess in that way all those childish dreams were accurate. However, instead of actually doing something productive with my energy I get to use it all crawling up stairs and hopping around like Thumper. So if you still think having crutches would be a blast let me know and I’d be happy to break your leg.

Surgical Escapades

Well it has been nearly two weeks since I got peroneal tendon surgery. The recovery process has been an interesting and somewhat trying experience for me. The days since my surgery have been a rather miserable blur. I spend enormous amounts of energy doing practically nothing. It has definitely been interesting.

As I was preparing for this surgery I wanted to know what I should expect but I had a hard time finding firsthand information, so I will give my account and put it out in the great void in hopes that it may be of use to someone else that may be preparing for a similar event. My daily routines have been completely altered by surgery. The changes surgery has necessitated in my daily activities have overshadowed everything else in my life. So I will therefore have to devote more than one post to this event and its aftereffects.

Since surgery started this whole mess I will begin with that.

Me before surgery. Don't I look excited?
Me before surgery. Don't I look excited?

I went to the Central Utah Surgical Center early in the morning the day of my surgery. I was very impressed with the staff at this facility.They were prompt and the nurses were very understanding and considerate.

I did, unfortunately, have to wear a silly hospital gown with an embarrassingly large slit up the side and openings for heart monitoring equipment in less than optimal places for us ladies.

But I was thrilled that I actually got to wear my panties during this procedure. This may seem like a silly thing to be excited about but it kept the embarrassment at a minimum. I didn’t have to worry about everything hanging out, and that made me happy.

Before surgery-I still look alert.
Before surgery-I still look alert.

Once I had checked in at the facility everything happened very quickly. I was only in the waiting room for a couple minutes before I was taken back and prepped for surgery.

I was told to write "yes" on the right spot.
I was told to write "yes" on the right spot.

I soon found myself on a gurney in route to the operating room with an IV in place and several doctors in tow. Once in the operating room I was transferred to the operating table (despite the name it was surprisingly comfortable). Then the anesthesiologist told me he was going to start pumping the juices and only a few seconds later I was out. I woke up in the recovery room. Keeping my eyes open seemed, at first, a nearly impossible task. As I regained awareness I realized that I was shivering cold and that my throat was incredibly dry. I didn’t know this at the time, but apparently it is common for patients to be in shock when they wake up after surgery, hence the shivering. They hooked up a heating system to my bed and I was feeling warm in no time. The dry throat, I found out, was caused by the breathing tube they put down your throat when they have you under anesthesia.

15 or 20 minutes after waking up
15 or 20 minutes after waking up

I learned from Jason when he was called back to be with me in the recovery room, that for some reason, it took me fifty minutes longer to wake up than anticipated.I guess that’s not terribly surprising considering how much I hate waking up in the morning.

That's one huge cast!
That's one huge cast!

After half an hour of proving that I really was awake and functioning, IV removing, and figuring out how to use crutches I was in my way home loaded up with Percocet and wearing my knee-high purple cast, that I not-so-lovingly refer to as the purple herman.

My doctor spoke to Jason while I was still unconscious about the outcome of my surgery. Apparently it went well and my ankle should be as good as new in six months.

My tendon was much more damaged than anticipated. My peroneus brevis was torn completely in half longitudinally from the top of my ankle bone to my fifth metatarsal. Since I am still wearing my cast, I can’t see my wound, but Jason and I estimate that this is roughly a four or five inch tear. A few portions of my tendon had also frayed. These frays had to be removed. The doctor said, considering the poor condition of my peroneus brevis, it almost certainly would have ruptured had I not had the surgery. My peroneus longus tendon, which originally was believed to be the damaged tendon, was “pristine” as the doctor put it. So it required no surgical intervention.

This is a very lovely picture of me at home the day of my surgery.
This is a very lovely picture of me at home the day of my surgery.

That was my surgery in a nutshell. The first few days afterwards I spent all my time in bed. This was per the doctor’s orders, but thanks to pain, drugs, and swelling, there’s no way I would have been able to go anywhere anyway. Trips just a few feet to the bathroom were difficult enough, trying to use crutches while being on heavy-duty pain killers was an unsettling experience. But crutches, and all the fun they entail, will be the subject of my next post.