Barbara my husband had double knee replacement in 2006.  Whatever pain he had 
must not have been too bad as he didn’t complain.  I think the one thing that 
made it easier for him is doing your pre-surgery exercised to strengthen leg 
muscles.  A month before surgery he a given a 3-ring binder with all the 
excises listed.  He did them faithfully all day so his body was ready for the 
demand surgery would put on his legs.  In fact, he only went to P.T. for about 
3-4 weeks, as they said they couldn’t do any more for him and Medicare wouldn’t 
pay for it any more.  He was driving again in less than 4 weeks.  Of course, he 
didn’t have any other health problems, which might make a big difference.

 

Good luck with whatever you decide to do.

 

Patti - Wisconsin

 

From: Barbara Alma [mailto:balmat...@aol.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, December 08, 2010 2:04 AM
To: rp...@neillsupply.com; tmic-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: [TMIC] question

 

Hi Rob,

 

After having trouble with what I thought was my leg due to 2 DVT's and poor 
circulation, I found out that 

I am not totally bone on bone yet, but there is a lot of arthritis, which means 
I could get the replacement.  I'm only 59, so figure if I can put it off for 
awhile, I will.  As much as I walk, I'll probably never wear it out.  

 

I was actually on schedule for a knee replacement last year when I asked to see 
a physical therapist in order to best improve the strength in my body so I 
could get through the rehab in the best way possible.  The therapist told me 
that the knee is no walk in the park.  It is extremely painful, after the 
surgery, but especially the rehab.  I don't understand what you mean about 
rehab differently.  From what I understand, and I really didn't go into it all 
the way, you have exercises and walking.  He told me that a very painful part 
is straightening the knee, as it will want to be bent to be in less pain, but 
not good since you develop scar tissue very quickly and if not careful, you 
will not be able to straighten it fully.  I had a couple of visits and from the 
exercises that I was doing for my legs I no longer had the pain that I was 
having.  

 

At the time I also was having a lot of pain with my shoulder over for a year 
and a half at that point, so knew it would be extra painful on the shoulder.  I 
use canadian crutches or a rolling walker to get around, and the orthopedic 
surgeon says that "I walk on my shoulders", lol. I had rotator cuff surgery and 
a bone spur removed two months ago and am no longer in pain there, so when I 
really need the knee, I'll hopefully be in better shape.  

 

Good luck Rob, just thought I'd share my small bit of knowledge.

Hugs, Barbara A in Auburn CA

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Robert Pall <rp...@neillsupply.com>
To: tmic-list <tmic-list@eskimo.com>
Sent: Tue, Dec 7, 2010 8:43 am
Subject: [TMIC] question

Have any of you gotten replacement hips or knees…..I think I may need a new 
knee and I was wondering….. if you have no feeling (other than pain) how do you 
rehab…surely you cannot do it the normal rehab way?

Thanks 

Rob in New Jersey 

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