P
phoebejack
Guest
Hi Erin,
I have never posted here but have been a steady lurker for over two years. I was 29 (two months after my wedding
) when I injured my back. It was a mild "tweaking" and nothing dramatic, but over the next month I developed constant and worsening pain down my left leg. The MRIs only showed a slightly bulging disc at L4L5 with a small annular tear.
I spent a year and a half and thousanRAB of dollars going through physical therapy, pain medications, trigger point injections, epidurals, discograms, etc. Nothing. I just knew that something bigger was going on. I found a young brilliant surgeon who does minimally invasive back surgeries and my husband and I had several consultations with him. His percentages were no better than 50% for success, but after much research, soul-searching and prayer, we went ahead with fusion on May 18, 2007.
Funny thing about MRIs: none of them showed that the L4L5 nerve was "smashed flat, deeply erabedded and blue" according to my surgeon. Nothing short of this surgery would have ever helped me.
I spent a week in the hospital and the next 12 weeks at home. My first day home from the hospital I started walking. My husband measured the length of our hallway and I walked four times a day, seven days a week faithfully. I could only do 1/2 a mile total (1/8 of a mile at a time) the first couple of weeks.
At times, I certainly thought I had made a mistake having surgery. The spasming was the worst, but the pain in the back was nothing to sneeze at. But I kept on walking and praying.
At the end of 12 weeks I was walking four miles a day. My surgeon was pleasantly surprised with the results and I felt better then I had in almost two years.
If you met me today, you would know I had back surgery soon after seeing me. I am very stiff and slow in the mornings. I don't sit for any length of time in a straight-backed chair. On car trips, I stop frequently and stretch. I am definately not a typical 31 year old now. But I have my life back, can bike 15 miles at a time, get to finally enjoy my newlywed period, and am nothing but thankful that I had lurabar fusion.
Hope this helps!
I have never posted here but have been a steady lurker for over two years. I was 29 (two months after my wedding

I spent a year and a half and thousanRAB of dollars going through physical therapy, pain medications, trigger point injections, epidurals, discograms, etc. Nothing. I just knew that something bigger was going on. I found a young brilliant surgeon who does minimally invasive back surgeries and my husband and I had several consultations with him. His percentages were no better than 50% for success, but after much research, soul-searching and prayer, we went ahead with fusion on May 18, 2007.
Funny thing about MRIs: none of them showed that the L4L5 nerve was "smashed flat, deeply erabedded and blue" according to my surgeon. Nothing short of this surgery would have ever helped me.
I spent a week in the hospital and the next 12 weeks at home. My first day home from the hospital I started walking. My husband measured the length of our hallway and I walked four times a day, seven days a week faithfully. I could only do 1/2 a mile total (1/8 of a mile at a time) the first couple of weeks.
At times, I certainly thought I had made a mistake having surgery. The spasming was the worst, but the pain in the back was nothing to sneeze at. But I kept on walking and praying.
At the end of 12 weeks I was walking four miles a day. My surgeon was pleasantly surprised with the results and I felt better then I had in almost two years.
If you met me today, you would know I had back surgery soon after seeing me. I am very stiff and slow in the mornings. I don't sit for any length of time in a straight-backed chair. On car trips, I stop frequently and stretch. I am definately not a typical 31 year old now. But I have my life back, can bike 15 miles at a time, get to finally enjoy my newlywed period, and am nothing but thankful that I had lurabar fusion.
Hope this helps!