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Tucsonlady40
04-26-2006, 04:05 AM
Hello to all,

I'm just curious if anyone here has had a Talus break?

Last July, 21 y/o son fell off roof and broke Talus, severly broke joint, and slithered cartlidge out. He underwent emergency surgery with 5 screws put in. Went to Pt and still couldn't get the pain to calm down, swelling all the time.

March 06, surgery again to remove the 5 screws and to drill more holes in bones to try and save as he is more than likely looking at a fusion. Dr. says that if the bone dies, he'll have to undergo a ankle replacement surgery and that they only last 5 years. Dr. also said that you can only have 3 in a life time.

Just wondering if anyone else has had this kind of break and what you've experienced with it.

Thanks,
Bernie

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Tucsonlady40
05-08-2006, 07:52 PM
anyone at all have this?

kimann
05-08-2006, 09:16 PM
Bernie,
I'm not sure which bone he broke? Which ligaments are damaged? You said slithered cartilage, was it salvaged, or destroyed? 7 months is a long time, but some bones do need longer.
I broke my fibula above the talus head last May, and did not seek help until Oct, and after 5 months of alternates, ended up having surgery to join it properly. My lateral/collaterals are damaged, swollen, thick, and painful, from all the rubbing, and the medials are not quite as bad, but bad enough for me to be aware of them.
One surgeon felt that all of it needed to be done, but he was not a specialist and wouldn't mess with me. The second, a foot/ankle man, said he didn't want to start cutting ligaments, as they do not regenerate, but said he wanted to repair the bone first and see what happened. It had healed in such a way that the mortise was constantly shifting, which gave the ligaments no chance to heal. Repaired, they might heal enough to not be a bother.
I was told, 1: the artificial joints are nowhere as good as knees and hips, have less than a 50% success rate. 2. They do not last when they do succeed. 3. The repair on my bone is my one and only chance at a functioning joint, because there is no room for him to put new hardware if this "set" breaks. If it fails, or breaks, fusion is it, and if it fails, I lose the foot. No discussion of trying to do replacements as a last resort. (Your son may be different, depending on which bones are involved, and how much bone the surgeon has to work with.)
I would hope he is seeing a very reputable foot/ankle doc, and doing whatever he's told. When the bone is stable, (If they're drilling holes to provoke growth, it likely isn't entirely stable, then his ligaments will have a chance to heal, and if they still bother him sufficiently, he can find a surgeon who is able and willing to do a rebuild.
My own outcome is likely to be very good, as my surgeon is extra cautious. I was told again today, "I probably won't let you walk at 8 weeks, I want to see the bone first, and not take chances." (Norm is 6-8 weeks) When the bone is stable, if the ligaments are a problem I can't live with, I will seek help, but hope I don't have to. If I do, I will probably fuse. I'm not as afraid of that as I once was, people with them do a lot if they're determined, and they DO minimize, even eliminate pain that is caused by unstable joints and rubbing, torn ligaments. But I'm almost 40, and really don't want any more surgery than is needed to make life bearable. I walk, swim, bike, don't ski or skate, etc., so it doesn't matter.
I don't know if this is helpful or not. If not, let us know what you're looking for more specifically. Either way, do post again, please, and let us know how it is going. :angel: Kim

 
 
 




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