←back to thread

611 points sohkamyung | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.471s | source
Show context
rodary ◴[] No.43110391[source]
Anecdotal but...

Broke my femur neck on a mountain bike. Surgery, plates and screws. Surgeon said no weight on the broken bone for 8 weeks and no walking on it for 12. And then we'll see he said.

In 4 weeks I was on a trainer (fork fixed to the trainer). Started easy with 30min sessions and then increased time and force applied to the pedals.

After 2 weeks of "riding", started putting weight on the bone with short walks around the house.

8 weeks after the surgery rocked up to a road race, still on crutches because walking was still a bit uncomfy but being on the bike was fine. Raced to a 3rd place (Masters A) with hard breakaways and all.

12 weeks after the surgery go to see the surgeon to check if I can start walking (already walking by this stage as normal). He X-rays me and says your bone is fully healed. Strange but good he said.

I told him the story. Still don't know if he believed me.

replies(11): >>43110425 #>>43110838 #>>43111314 #>>43111448 #>>43111486 #>>43112008 #>>43112118 #>>43112714 #>>43113227 #>>43115662 #>>43118792 #
1. raverbashing ◴[] No.43112008[source]
Doctors are good at doing the "fixing" work, but the recovery work is something else

Good physios will insist on working as soon as possible, even if it's very light work.

replies(1): >>43112790 #
2. jq-r ◴[] No.43112790[source]
Anecdata but I agree. Had two spine surgeries at two highly regarded places and those surgeons had no clue whatsoever on the recovery. They've fixed their part and the rehab part is someone else's problem.

Luckily I have a good therapist. But still I'm disappointed as they should know that part better.