Surprisingly, the first few days were easier than I
expected. I was prescribed narcotics and a hefty dose of ibuprofen, but
I stopped the narcotics after just 2 days, with essentially no pain
transitioning to just the ibuprofen. (Dr. Keene prescribes the
ibuprofen not just for pain, but as a precaution to stop the bone from
growing back. I had to take 2400mg a day for two weeks.) Going to the
bathroom was still challenging, mostly due to the stiffness of my
bandages and not being able to bend my leg much. I was also stuck in
compression stockings on both of my legs for a few days.
Being
on crutches was annoying, but not as terrible as it could have been, as
I was allowed to be partial weight bearing on my operated leg. My paperwork said that I would be on crutches for 2-3 weeks.
I
had a few simple PT exercises to do at home for the first week by
myself. Things like ankle pumps and tightening my glutes and quads. I
wouldn't start formal PT until 8 days post-op. I had read that Dr.
Philippon had his patients on the bike with no resistance less than 24
hours after surgery, so that was my plan. If one of the best hip
surgeons in the country had his patients doing it, I'll be damned if I
wasn't going to do it too. My parents were skeptical, but Dr. Keene
gave me the okay, so they helped me up on the bike. I had the option of
my mountain bike on a trainer or the stationary bike downstairs. I
chose my normal bike on the trainer. I definitely needed someone to
help me as well as a small stool to get on for a while. My first time
was awkward and very difficult to get my operated leg all the way
around. I was very hesitant and doing a full rotation was comically
slow. A good tip is to raise the bike seat as high as possible and
don't reach for the handle bars at all. I held onto the wall next to me
for the first few days. Days one and two I didn't do much spinning; I
just oh-so-slowly rotated my leg with the help of the pedals. Then on
the 3rd or 4th day, I could magically pedal like normal (still holding
onto the wall.) Then I really felt like I was getting some good range
of motion work in. Once the bike felt more comfortable, I transitioned
to three 10 minute sessions a day.
I spent most of my first
week alternating between sitting in my recliner and laying on my
stomach on my bed (which you are supposed to do to gently stretch your
hip flexors.) When I was in the recliner, I tried to remember to turn
my ice machine on. I had no swelling that I was aware of. I think the
ice and elevated legs helped with that. After a few days of sleeping on
my back and spending most of my time sitting/laying, my lower back got
very achy and painful. I didn't have any hip pain, but my back acted up
for the first week or two. It didn't start to feel better until I
started sleeping on my side and getting up and around more. I think it
was around day 5 or 6 when I started rolling over very carefully to my
non-op side with a pillow between my legs to sleep. I was told I had no
sleeping restrictions, but it still made me a little nervous since so
many other surgeons make their patients sleep on their backs in these
crazy feet booties for up to two weeks.
I took my first shower 3 days post-op and it was utterly exhausting. I felt more drained afterward than if I had gone for a 20 mile run. My mom had to help me take off my layers of bandages and then tape me up with Glad Press and Seal over my incisions. Getting in and out of the tub was challenging as well. The easiest way I found to take a shower in a standard bathtub was this:
Put a stool in the bathroom right next to the tub. Sit on the stool
and have someone help you swing your legs around into the tub. Stand,
shower, use the stool for support to turn around, etc. When getting
out, stay standing in the tub and put the stool outside of the tub. Sit
on the stool and have someone help you swing your legs out of the tub.
Now if you have a nice walk in shower, then you're luckier than me!
My big
outings during my first week were crutching down the street and back for
a "walk" and my dad driving me home to my house to get my mail. It
felt so good to go for a drive in the car after being stuck in the house
for days!
|
Excuse me, I believe you stole my spot. |
|
My parents were in charge of walking my dog. |
1 comment:
Awww, your pup is good recovery company!
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