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wxKathy2
Guest
Hi All,
First I want to thank everyone who has posted about their post-fusion experience and for the "tips" thread. My husband had L4-S1 Fusion on July 15th and thanks to you all I had purchased all the little helpful things that help make him more comfortable right now. Thank you!
However, right after surgery he woke up and could not move his right foot and had nurabness in his lower leg. This has not improved and they call it drop foot or foot drop - unfortunately this was NOT discovered in the recovery room as he had very low BP and everyone was worried about that - we think they did not examine his legs in recovery - it took until the night shift nurse to discover the problem.....They immediately did a CT scan and an MRI to make sure no hardware was on a nerve. The neurosurgeon even came up to the hospital at midnight to see the CT scans himself.....
They believe it is a compression of the peroneal nerve (at the knee) that occurred because of the positioning of his body during surgery which was 4+ hours long....So now he is in PT but they do not think it's going to help so the doc wants an EMG to make sure it is not the back adn then he wants to do a peroneal nerve decompression procedure which is something like a carpal tunnel procedure.
Has this happened to anyone else? Again I am very grateful for the tips at the top of this board and to all who have responded to me in the past regarding my husband......
Hope all of you are doing okay....
Best wishes,
Kathy
First I want to thank everyone who has posted about their post-fusion experience and for the "tips" thread. My husband had L4-S1 Fusion on July 15th and thanks to you all I had purchased all the little helpful things that help make him more comfortable right now. Thank you!
However, right after surgery he woke up and could not move his right foot and had nurabness in his lower leg. This has not improved and they call it drop foot or foot drop - unfortunately this was NOT discovered in the recovery room as he had very low BP and everyone was worried about that - we think they did not examine his legs in recovery - it took until the night shift nurse to discover the problem.....They immediately did a CT scan and an MRI to make sure no hardware was on a nerve. The neurosurgeon even came up to the hospital at midnight to see the CT scans himself.....
They believe it is a compression of the peroneal nerve (at the knee) that occurred because of the positioning of his body during surgery which was 4+ hours long....So now he is in PT but they do not think it's going to help so the doc wants an EMG to make sure it is not the back adn then he wants to do a peroneal nerve decompression procedure which is something like a carpal tunnel procedure.
Has this happened to anyone else? Again I am very grateful for the tips at the top of this board and to all who have responded to me in the past regarding my husband......
Hope all of you are doing okay....
Best wishes,
Kathy