Showing posts with label wrist fusion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wrist fusion. Show all posts

Saturday, 1 June 2013

Update on wrist fusion surgery

4 1/2 months later:
I'm still very happy with the results of the surgery.  I no longer have pain in my left wrist, which was the first priority, but I have also regained function that I did not know I had lost.  The beginning of the story is in this post about the fusion.

Here's a picture of my right hand when I try to turn it palm up.  You can see that I can't make it level, as you would if someone were giving you change.
                                          A. McKinnon
Now here is the left, after the fusion.  Before it was like the right wrist and did not turn palm up. (that motion is called supination) Now I can make it turn almost 90 degrees with my elbow at my waist.


A. McKinnon
It  took some work and exercise to regain that range but it was well worth it.  An added bonus is that I can type faster now.

I also have copies of the X-rays at the bottom of the post.  If you do not like to see X-rays then don't go all the way to the end.  Not everyone has an interest in the actual nuts and bolts (only too true) of orthopedic surgery.

This picture shows how well the scar has healed four months later, and a ring splint that I wear for a swan neck finger, in case you are curious about the silver ring.


                                       A.McKinnon

This hardware did not cause me any trouble at the airport.

Here is the link to the post about the actual surgery

The X-Rays


                                      A.McKinnon

Saturday, 2 March 2013

Wrist Fusion Surgery

My wrist has a lot of damage that occurred before I was diagnosed. A few years after diagnosis I saw a surgeon who would have been happy to do a number of procedures to make my hands look and function better but I could not believe that it was necessary then.

25 years later...

Recently I was worried that I might have a ruptured tendon so I saw an orthopedic surgeon.  His opinion was that I had to have my wrist fused before he would do any other hand surgery. He said a replacement wrist joint was not an option for me, given the spotty success rate.  Since I had only about 10 degrees of movement in my wrist it sounded as though I would not lose much flexibility and my hand would be in a more functional position.

This is one view of how it looked before the surgery:


You can see that my hand above has an ulnar deviation. The whole hand is no longer straight. More often in RA it is the fingers that sway to the side. This is the way it looks now, after surgery:



Much better than before. Very strange how you don't really notice as things change over the years.  Finger deformities always seemed more obvious than the orientation of my hand. 

My operation was 5 weeks ago.  It was done as day surgery and it took  2 1/2 hours to complete.  I had a nerve block that numbed my whole arm.  When I saw my arm raised in the air after the nerve block and just before the operation I thought it belonged to someone else.  

After the operation they put a cast on from below the knuckles to above the elbow. That left me able to bend my arm a little.  You can't tell that from the picture because the cast is wrapped in a tensor bandage.  There is an open gap down the whole cast to accommodate swelling.  That purple arrow on my shoulder marks the correct arm for the surgery.  There were more markings under the cast.




The nerve block was very effective and I have moderate regrets I did not stay  conscious through the operation to hear the surgeon talk his surgical assistant through the process. However my curiosity wilted once they started.  I have heard the noise level in the OR is high and I know surgeons use power tools in their work. Remembering the noises was not on my bucket list.




Now that my wrist is fused it is supposed to be a pain free joint and stronger than it was.  It's early to say how that will work out but my fingers still move well. They were very bruised and swollen but that's normal after surgery.  Anything the surgeon touches seems to bruise and swell more dramatically now than it did when I was younger.





I am told that the incision is healing well and it is meticulously stitched - it will probably not be very noticeable. In the following picture you can barely see it.

                                               4 1/2 weeks after surgery

                                             just after stitches and cast were removed


I was glad to see this blog before my surgery. Reading someone's actual story of the process is more illuminating than reading the technical sites like Wheeless. I had read enough that there were no surprises after the surgery.

All in all my hand looks better in profile and straight on. After the cast was removed my elbow range of motion was diminished but with rehab exercises from the Occupational Therapist (OT) I have regained all of the motion of my elbow.

There is still some pain in my wrist as it heals, and I must wear a splint for the next month. The OT custom-makes them for each hand surgery patient.  The splint can be removed for washing and exercise.
                                     The Splint

I am doing a follow up post showing how it looks 4 months after, and also the X-rays of the hardware they actually use for the fusion. I can hardly believe what is under my skin.  You can see it here.