This patient support community is for discussions relating to orthopedics, back pain, bone or joint pain, broken bones, carpal tunnel syndrome, hip or knee replacement, neck and shoulder pain, orthopedic surgery, osteoporosis, spinal injury, sports injury, and tennis elbow.
How are you feeling?
Well I think you need to rule out if any pathology exists at hip joint or in femur.
Pain in hip joint can be due to pathology involving the bone or nerve. If it is bone then you should be seeing an orthopaedician and imaging studies needs to be performed to see the anatomy in and around the hips.
Alternatively, if it is due to nerve impingement, then imaging study involving lower back needs to be performed.
I think it is the compressive pathology causing such symptoms.
You should be seeing an orthopaedician at earliest and do imaging studies for assessment.
Keep me informed regarding your decision and results of investigations if done.
Bye.
Because the underlying pathologies of low back, hip, and shooting leg pain (radicular pain) reside within the low back and/or hip, essentially the same physical examination is performed for each complaint.
In the lumbosacral spine, radicular symptoms are caused by an intervertebral disc bulge, protrusion, extrusion, or sequestration that compresses and inflames a nerve root in approximately 98% of all cases. Other causes of radicular symptoms emanating from the lumbosacral spine include disc osteophytes, a buckled ligamentum flavum, zygapophysial (Z)-joint hypertrophy, and other causes of lumbosacral spinal stenosis.
Hence I think a referral and complete examination by an orthopaedician is essential and urgent.
Hope this helps you.
Bye.
I hope that is the correct terminology, I just call it "ow" :)
Thanks again
I suppose this is your name. How old are you?
How is your pain and numbness now?
If it is compressive pathology like nerve impingement or pressure on nerve due to disc herniation, the treatment would be to release the nerve from the pressure point. Initially the surgeon would plan for some conservative management like physiotherapy and ultrasound, but if this does not work then surgery would be done depending on the diagnosis.
Keep me informed about your meeting with orthopaedician.
All the best and take care.
Bye.
-Keaton
How are you feeling?
I think you can take help of pain management specialist to ease your pain in step-wise manner.
What pain-killer medicines are you on and how are they schedule over 24 hours period?
What other therapy you are doing for relief of pain?
You should be on one or two pain killer medications which should span over period of 24 hours regularly and at any time no two medicines should go at the same time.
Are you a smoker?
Keep me informed if you have any other queries.
Bye.
How are you feeling?
I would suggest not taking the rod out till the time you are sure that your bones have healed completely.
I think you can get imaging study done after you meet new orthopedist.
I think you can ask your physiotherapist for any exercise which can be done at home so that muscle strengthening of legs can be achieved.
I can understand that you might get dependant on medications once you have started, but you have to be on some medications so that the inflammatory response in body can be controlled.
Your pain could be due to some inflammatory process.
Keep me informed if you have any queries.
Bye.