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  • #31
    Ev, i just read back over your entire thread...
    i once told you if i were you i'd consider waiting because you said
    you had no pain...but now i think you are doing the exact right thing by
    having the surgery at this time....
    i am absolutely amazed that you don't have pain!!!
    i need fusion T4-sacrum....and i have incredible pain....from the curves,
    the bad discs, pain from sacroiliac joints as well...
    everything was fine til i herniated discs, as i mentioned....then the pain kicked
    in and never stopped!!
    i think you would be taking a big chance not having the surgery now, especially
    when you are able to have Dr Lenke!
    without a crystal ball, you do not know if/when the day would come when
    you would wake up with typical lumbar pain that so many with low curves
    have..
    i hope you sleep well, knowing you made a good decision....
    i think you are doing the smartest thing...

    jess

    Comment


    • #32
      Evelyn,
      I was extremely active prior to surgery with pain only when standing a lengthy period of time or lifting too much or raking leaves, etc. While no one wants pre surgery pain, it would make the decision easier. I even started a thread once "Is surgery a gamble?". I truly believe that not having surgery is a bigger gamble with a large curve. My ribs are now separated from my hips and i can take deeper breaths. Dr. Lenke would not recommend surgery if he didn't think your quality of life in later years would be better than without the surgery. You should have seen some of the people in Dr. Lenke's waiting room that delayed their surgeries. It was pretty sad. I am so thankful I had the surgery when I could still get a good correction. You are so fortunate to have Dr. Lenke as your surgeon. I will email you with my phone number.
      Karen

      Surgery-Jan. 5, 2011-Dr. Lenke
      Fusion T-4-sacrum-2 cages/5 osteotomies
      70 degree thoracolumbar corrected to 25
      Rib Hump-GONE!
      Age-60 at the time of surgery
      Now 66
      Avid Golfer & Tap Dancer
      Retired Kdgn. Teacher

      See photobucket link for:
      Video of my 1st Day of Golf Post-Op-3/02/12-Bradenton, FL
      Before and After Picture of back 1/7/11
      tap dancing picture at 10 mos. post op 11/11/11-I'm the one on the right.
      http://s1119.photobucket.com/albums/k630/pottoff2/

      Comment


      • #33
        Evelyn,
        Coming from someone who had surgery at age 67 and with your curves and your age, all I can say is "Hello". To me it is a no brainer. I know fear can paralyze people, but please don't let it paralyze you. I can tell you, I wish some brilliant Doctor would have diagnosed me much sooner than at age 65.
        Sally
        Diagnosed with severe lumbar scoliosis at age 65.
        Posterior Fusion L2-S1 on 12/4/2007. age 67
        Anterior Fusion L3-L4,L4-L5,L5-S1 on 12/19/2007
        Additional bone removed to decompress right side of L3-L4 & L4-L5 on 4/19/2010
        New England Baptist Hospital, Boston, MA
        Dr. Frank F. Rands735.photobucket.com/albums/ww360/butterflyfive/

        "In God We Trust" Happy moments, praise God. Difficult moments, seek God. Quiet moments, worship God. Painful moments, trust God. Every moment, thank God.

        Comment


        • #34
          [QUOTE=Pooka1;134314]I am glad you made a decision.

          I find the comment about a 45* compensatory T curve possibly compromising organs coming from an orthopedic surgeon to be mildly shocking. I still find it shocking even given the progression. As far as I know, you need to get north of 90* or more for some period to demonstrate any organ compromise in adults. On the contrary, collapsing a lung during some spinal surgeries does compromise lung function for a few years as far as I know. Not sure about the thoracic insufficiency issue in small children.

          It's much more believable to me, since we found from the doctors that our son's lung could not fully expand due to his spine prior to surgery, although he is a teen vs an adult.
          Mom of 14yo son diagnosed Oct 2011
          Surgery 1/3/12 w Dr. Geof Cronen,
          Tampa General Hospital T3 to L1
          Jacob's pre surg curves: T58 & L31 12/28/11
          photos & xrays in "First-Time Surgery" thread "Before & After"

          Comment


          • #35
            In my case, I waited a year too long...

            I had some pain for almost 15 years prior to surgery, but it was manageable. I stayed very active, which I believe stabilized my back with strong core muscles. It allowed me to postpone surgery for many years. My surgeon was also of the mind set to wait until absolutely necessary. But eventually, by my late 30's, it progressed to the point where I had regular epidural injections for several years and was on anti-inflammatory meds and an occasional pain pill. (Which I was stubbornly resistant to, even though it really helped on the bad days.) The progression started getting worse and I knew the time for surgery was coming near. Still, I put it off "one more year". I shrank 3" in the next 6 months, and my curve really collapsed. At my age (49 last year at surgery) I was not as flexible as a younger person, so I only had a 50% correction. Which put me right back at where I was a year before surgery. If I had done it the year before, I would have had a much better correction.

            But with that being said, I am still doing awesome, even though I waited too long.

            It is such a hard decision. I agree about waiting as long as possible, but at some point, most of us eventually make the leap. I personally have never regretted it. It has made my life so much better. Even if you don't have any pain, you will no longer have that black cloud hanging over you, wondering if and when surgery is in the future. It seems to dominate your thoughts at times. You will no longer have to worry about your spine progressing or collapsing, and you can get on with your life! And you do heal faster if you are younger.

            As far as patients who don't have pain prior to surgery not being as happy with the outcomes-it makes total sense to me. In my opinion, I don't think the surgical outcome is necessarily very different in the two groups- only the perception is. I will gladly take my muscle tightness and the sensation of being fused any day to the feeling of sciatica or spasms I had prior to surgery. If someone doesn't have that pain before hand to compare to, they may not be as happy with the surgery, even though it may be the same outcome. If you are progressing, I would take being fused over the uncertainty of the future-it is usually only a matter of time. You never know when it will collapse like mine did. And you have to remember that the main goal of surgery is for prevention of further progression and deterioration, not to relieve pain. Eventually, most scoli patients do feel some pain, and hopefully you will be saved from experiencing painful sciatica, etc., in the future by being fused. I wouldn't wish that on anybody. Being fused truly isn't that bad. It hasn't stopped me from doing anything, and I am fused from T3 to S1 with pelvic fixation. It is a little rough at first, but by 6 months post op, I was climbing mountains, literally! I've been roller skating, and I was just released to go skiing at my one-year check up. I am a perpetual optimist, and even I was surprised at how few limitations I have with fusion. For me, it is so much better than the alternative. I can't imagine where I would be in another 10 years if we lived in a time where surgery wasn't an option... We are indeed fortunate.

            Good luck, and keep us posted. You have lots of support!
            Jenee'-52
            Bend, Oregon

            Braced 3 years in high school
            Lumbar 70'+ Thoracic 70'+
            I had 3" shrinkage in 6 months...

            Surgery Jan 10, 2011
            9 hours
            T3 to S1 with pelvic fixation
            Both curves now 35'

            Possible revison for Flatback Syndrome
            Non-fusion
            Loose/broken hardware-awaiting CT results

            Here is the link to my before and after pics..
            http://www.scoliosis.org/forum/showt......&highlight=

            Comment


            • #36
              Advice

              Jenee, I love reading your advice. You are always so logical and reassuring.
              Thanks : ))
              50 years old!!!!!
              Wore Milwaulkee Brace 1976-77
              Original curve 36 degrees ( measured in the 70s)
              Advanced to 61 degrees 01/2011
              Surgery 07/11/2011
              Fused T1-L2 (curve now in the 20s!)

              Comment


              • #37
                Originally posted by jeneemohler View Post
                In my opinion, I don't think the surgical outcome is necessarily very different in the two groups- only the perception is.
                Absolutely.
                Never argue with an idiot. They always drag you down to their level, and then they beat you with experience. --Twain
                ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                Surgery 2/10/93 A/P fusion T4-L3
                Surgery 1/20/11 A/P fusion L2-sacrum w/pelvic fixation

                Comment


                • #38
                  Jess, Karen, Sally, Jenee & others,

                  Thank you so much for your thoughtful and kind advice. It really is reassuring to hear from people who have been through this, as well as those who are just knowledgeable about the subject. I agree about the issue of pain perception. I have been trying to remember what it felt like for the month or two last year that I had bad sciatica. If I can hold on to that memory, it helps me better understand why this surgery is necessary!

                  As you say, I should do this while I'm young(er), and not delay until I loose bone density, etc. Also, I have a good support system now, and who knows what will happen in the future. Thanks again! I'm sure I'll be checking back in the next weeks before the big day.

                  Best,
                  Evelyn
                  age 48
                  80* thoracolumbar; 40* thoracic
                  Reduced to ~16* thoracolumbar; ~0* thoracic
                  Surgery 3/14/12 with Dr. Lenke in St. Louis, T4 to S1 with pelvic fixation
                  Broken rods 12/1/19; scheduled for revision fusion L1-L3-4 with Dr. Lenke 2/4/2020
                  Not "confused" anymore, but don't know how to change my username.

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Curves compromise internal organs?

                    My 80 deg thoracic curve caused permanent loss of lung tissue-it doesn't come back. My stomach was on its side(watermelon stomach my gastro called it). Gastric acid migrated up into my lower esophagus causing scarring and stricture--requiring dilitation --all this without much pain from the scoliosis.
                    My heart was rotated-if EKG electrodes are placed as if I had a normal thorax erroneous EKG reading resulted. My ECHO cardiogram even shows(still) my descending aorta is not in the usual place but shifted to one side.

                    Whichever way the spine goes so do the internal organs.
                    Last edited by Karen Ocker; 01-23-2012, 12:56 PM.
                    Original scoliosis surgery 1956 T-4 to L-2 ~100 degree thoracic (triple)curves at age 14. NO hardware-lost correction.
                    Anterior/posterior revision T-4 to Sacrum in 2002, age 60, by Dr. Boachie-Adjei @Hospital for Special Surgery, NY = 50% correction

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Height gain?

                      Okay, random question. I went for my pulmonary function test today and they measured my arm span at 5 ft. 3". My height is 5 foot 2". So, does that mean I will likely gain an inch of height with surgery? Or might I gain none because of disk and bone removal? Could I end up shorter?? :0 Also, how is it possible that I have been the same height for as long as I can remember, and yet my curve has ranged from 8 degrees (with brace in high school) to 80 degrees now? How is that physically possible??! If I have to go through this surgery, I would like for it to make me taller as a bonus! Bottom line: Is there any way to predict if/how much height you will gain?

                      ,
                      Evelyn
                      age 48
                      80* thoracolumbar; 40* thoracic
                      Reduced to ~16* thoracolumbar; ~0* thoracic
                      Surgery 3/14/12 with Dr. Lenke in St. Louis, T4 to S1 with pelvic fixation
                      Broken rods 12/1/19; scheduled for revision fusion L1-L3-4 with Dr. Lenke 2/4/2020
                      Not "confused" anymore, but don't know how to change my username.

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Originally posted by Confusedmom View Post
                        Okay, random question. I went for my pulmonary function test today and they measured my arm span at 5 ft. 3". My height is 5 foot 2". So, does that mean I will likely gain an inch of height with surgery? Or might I gain none because of disk and bone removal? Could I end up shorter?? :0 Also, how is it possible that I have been the same height for as long as I can remember, and yet my curve has ranged from 8 degrees (with brace in high school) to 80 degrees now? How is that physically possible??! If I have to go through this surgery, I would like for it to make me taller as a bonus! Bottom line: Is there any way to predict if/how much height you will gain?

                        ,
                        Evelyn
                        Evelyn,

                        I've got an even better one. They are measuring me at 1/2 to 1" TALLER than I have been for the last 27 years and my scoliosis is progressing. Explain that one. I measured myself on the wall a couple of months ago so that I could watch for shrinkage due to progression and that also said I grew. My doctor is blowing it all off as "margin of error". It's a little upsetting because I have consistently been measured at 5'7" for a LONG time and by different doctors. So how can I progress and grow at the same time?
                        Be happy!
                        We don't know what tomorrow brings,
                        but we are alive today!

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          hey Ev
                          i thought most surgeons give an estimate....
                          every surgeon i saw did...said things like
                          "you'll probably gain one and a half to two inches in height..."

                          so...have you asked the height question at your consult(s) ????

                          jess

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            Originally posted by Confusedmom View Post
                            Okay, random question. I went for my pulmonary function test today and they measured my arm span at 5 ft. 3". My height is 5 foot 2". So, does that mean I will likely gain an inch of height with surgery? Or might I gain none because of disk and bone removal? Could I end up shorter?? :0 Also, how is it possible that I have been the same height for as long as I can remember, and yet my curve has ranged from 8 degrees (with brace in high school) to 80 degrees now? How is that physically possible??! If I have to go through this surgery, I would like for it to make me taller as a bonus! Bottom line: Is there any way to predict if/how much height you will gain?

                            ,
                            Evelyn
                            While you were growing, the growth compensated for hte curving so the height remained about the same.

                            You might want to ask about the issue of your arm span being similar to your height because that can be an indicator of certain connective tissue disorders. If you have no other signs/symptoms then it probably means nothing.
                            Sharon, mother of identical twin girls with scoliosis

                            No island of sanity.

                            Question: What do you call alternative medicine that works?
                            Answer: Medicine


                            "We are all African."

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Originally posted by Pooka1 View Post
                              You might want to ask about the issue of your arm span being similar to your height because that can be an indicator of certain connective tissue disorders. If you have no other signs/symptoms then it probably means nothing.
                              Huh? Pooka, I thought everyone was supposed to have the same arm span as height?

                              Anyway, yes, I'll see what Dr. Lenke says at my pre-op. I will be surprised if I gain height.

                              On another random note, did anyone else feel compelled to paint their entire house before surgery? I am in the process of getting mine done. I think it's a combination of not wanting to stare at a bad paint job during recovery and also trying to distract myself right now!

                              Thanks for the responses on the height question.

                              Evelyn
                              age 48
                              80* thoracolumbar; 40* thoracic
                              Reduced to ~16* thoracolumbar; ~0* thoracic
                              Surgery 3/14/12 with Dr. Lenke in St. Louis, T4 to S1 with pelvic fixation
                              Broken rods 12/1/19; scheduled for revision fusion L1-L3-4 with Dr. Lenke 2/4/2020
                              Not "confused" anymore, but don't know how to change my username.

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                i don't understand...i thought most people with large curves gain
                                height after surgery....height that they LOST from curving...
                                i know i am down from 5'5" and a quarter....i always used to count that quarter...
                                to under 5'4"...
                                my sisters, without scoli, are both much taller than me...5' 8"

                                jess

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