and my MCL
and possibly my
meniscus
The Short story:
I hurt my knee skiing.
I’m having surgery to reconstruct my ACL. I hate crutches.
I’m going to have so much fun skiing . . . next year.
Watch for swimmers! |
The Long story:
Christmas, 2012 was magical.
Anchorage had a new layer of
snow, and the temperature warmed into the 30’s, which feels just plain warm and
balmy after hanging around -10. I
spent the week skiing and cross country skiing with the kids and some
friends. The 27th, we
decided to make a day of it at Alyeska.
My two youngest children are pretty new to skiing, and they are doing
great, but Alyeska is a more advanced resort (and more expensive) than Hilltop,
which is a 10 minute drive from our house. We were ready to head out to Alyeska when we checked the ski
report and saw that it was raining (yes, raining!) at Alyeska. We decided to stick to Hilltop one more
time before trying Alyeska with the kids.
Caleb. Just to the left of his head, you can see Denali, glowing orange in the sunrise. |
We had a great time! The lines were very short. The kids saw several friends. The snow was a bit icy though. No biggie. We skied all morning until it was 12 o’clock and time for
lunch. I saw my girls on the lift
and told them to meet in the lodge.
I convinced my youngest son, Caleb (6) to try a new run – one with a bit
of a steeper hill at the end. He
was ready for a challenge. I let
him go ahead of me (if he fell behind me I wouldn’t be able to stop and help
him up) and he came to a stop when he saw the steeper incline. I reassured him that I could help him
down the hill. I did what I had
done with all of the kids when they were little – I put my skis outside his and
made a snow plow. I have done this
a hundred times. Something went a
little wrong this time. Some how,
one of his skis got stuck under mine.
I tried my best to pull him out, but we were going pretty fast, and my
snow plow was being pushed wider and wider, until Caleb fell and kind of took
my right knee down with him. It was slow and awkward.
I heard a snap and felt a flash
of pain. We landed in a very
awkward pile. My first fleeting
thought was that I wouldn’t be able to do the Salt Lake City Marathon this
year. (True.) I’m afraid I was a bit dramatic the
first ten seconds. I kept saying
“I’m hurt I’m hurt” and kind of freaking out, until I looked at Caleb and
realized that he was freaking out too.
So, I took a couple of deep breaths and tried to reassure Caleb that we
were fine and I asked him to help me take my skies off. My leg was stuck in a completely
unnatural position, and he was tangled up with me. I got his skis off and told him to walk down the hill and
tell Dad to get the ski patrol.
The lodge was only 200 m in front of us, so it wouldn’t be hard. I got my skis off, lifted up my right
leg, and tried to put it in a more natural position. And it felt better.
But it felt like my knee was loose and wobbly. I didn’t want to wait, so I tried to scoot down the
hill. That was really
uncomfortable, so I thought I’d try walking down the hill. I picked up my skis and stood up, only
with my ski boots on, I kept sliding.
So, to give myself a little more control, I put my skis on and skied
down the hill. I went in to the
lodge and had a little lunch and Shon walked me over to the first aid
station.
They played with my knee (which
was swelling up by then) and said they thought I had torn my ACL, and I should
go to the Orthopedic clinic and get it checked. I left with a
couple of free passes to ski again, my leg in a knee stabilizer and with a loaner
pair of all-terrain crutches – it is Alaska after all. Since I didn’t hurt very much, I
assumed that I had just sprained my knee.
(I realize now that if it were a sprain, it might have actually hurt
worse!)
In order to sit in the car with my leg straight, I had to sit in the middle, next to Shon, like a red neck. I think he liked it! |
The rest of the day, it continued
to swell up. It didn’t actually
hurt much if I didn’t move. I
packed it with snow. That really
helped with the swelling and throbbing.
Whenever I thought of the sound
my knee made, I felt sick to my stomach – especially if I thought that perhaps
I had torn something in there. So,
I just kept saying to myself that it was probably just a sprain. I kept saying “tomorrow I am going to
feel so much better.”
I didn’t feel better the next
morning. Putting weight on my knee
felt like trying to stand on a tower of blocks – I was going to fall
apart. That’s when I decided maybe
it was time to get an MRI. Being
new in town, and not knowing what my insurance would cover, I went to see my
GP. He said he thought it was
probably just a sprain but maybe we should get an x-ray to see if there was any
damage. Nothing showed up. Then, as an afterthought, he tried
pulling my leg forward, and it was very loose (classic sign of a torn ACL) so
he sent me for an MRI.
I love Nordic skiing! |
I didn’t feel like there was any
urgency, and Shon and I had tickets to see Stomp that night, so I almost didn’t
get the MRI. With Shon’s urging, I
did it anyway. (The concert was
great, and we were able to move our seats to the wheelchair section, where I
kept my knee up on a folding chair.
I tried to crutch it to the parking lot afterward, but using crutches on
ice is surprisingly exhausting, so I ended up waiting on the street, with the
homeless folk in front of City Hall!)
Perhaps this is a good time for
me to mention that if I could do it all over again, I would just go straight to
the Orthopedic clinic first. I
would have saved myself a lot of waiting. . .
Did I mention that it was the day
before New Year’s Eve? I should
have known it would take a long time to get my results back. I had the tests done on a Friday. I hoped to hear the next day. My actual results didn’t come back
until Wednesday! I happen to have
a friend who is a radiologist though, so I called and asked if he could tell me
a bit about the results (because, even though I kept saying that nothing was
wrong with me, I knew there really was something wrong.) He called me Monday morning and told me
that I had torn my ACL and MCL. I
asked how bad I had torn them, and he said the MCL was a grade 3 tear. Well, that didn’t sound too bad. I did a little research and found that
grade 3 is the most severe. It was
severed. The good news was that my
cartilage looked great!
Emily the snowboarder. |
One of the problems with hurting
yourself during a holiday is that all of the doctors are on vacation! I tried to make an appointment with Dr.
Manion, who I heard does the best knees. He was out of town, and wouldn’t be
back for a week. I figures it
could wait. Then, on Wednesday, my
GP called me to tell me the results of my MRI. He said “It looks like you’ve done a real number on your
knee. It isn’t an emergency, but
you should probably have surgery some time in the next couple of days.” What?! That sounded a bit urgent to me.
So, I made an appointment with
another doctor I heard did good knees.
He fit me in that Friday. I
was very relieved to hear that I would need to wait a month or more to have
surgery. It took all of the
pressure off. He was very
competent. He showed me the MRI,
and even pointed out that there was possibly a tear in my meniscus – which the
radiologist hadn’t even mentioned.
He recommended that we take a graft from my hamstring (an autograft),
and in 6 weeks fix my ACL, if my MCL had healed on its own, which it does 90%
of the time. I left the office
with a much nicer, though still very bulky, leg brace, and instructions to keep
my leg straight for a few more days, but to try putting weight on my leg
more.
Shopping. |
Did I mention how much I hate
crutches by this time?
Now that I knew there was no
rush, I took my time and did a little research. Shon (being an engineer) insisted that we get a second
opinion. I am a very loyal
person. I felt like I would
somehow be unfaithful if I saw another doctor. But, I also saw the logic in what Shon said, so I called and
got an appointment with Dr. Manion, who had been my first choice all
along. I also started doing a
little internet research, and talking to my friends/perfect strangers/physical
therapists about their experiences with ACL reconstruction.
Dr. Manion said all of the same
things the other doctor had said.
Then he recommended that instead of taking part of my hamstring, we use
a donor tissue, an allograft. I
had read about it, and saw that the results were nearly identical between
allografts and autografts, unless you are an elite athlete, in which case, the
autograft is slightly stronger.
I’m not an elite athlete. I
chose the allograft – the scaring is less, and the recovery is faster, since
there isn’t a second site that has to heal.
I’ve heard people say that they
weren’t comfortable having cadaver parts in their body. Let me say that I definitely prefer to
call it a donated tissue. Some
really nice, healthy person has given the gift that keeps on giving. The least I can do it refer to it them
as a “donor” not a “cadaver.”
So, then I had to decide which
doctor to go with. During this
ordeal, I only cried twice, and once was when I had to call and tell the first
doctor I saw that I had chosen another doctor. (Seriously, I may be lazy and unorganized, but I am Loyal.)
The second time I cried was when
I talked to my younger sister, Becki, who blew her ACL in high school. She was an excellent athlete who had
college scouts watching her. When
I thought of how hard it was for me, I realized how much harder it would have
been then. I’m sorry, Beck. I hope I carried your books for you as
you crutched around the school. It
probably felt like your friends had just moved on without you. I know. Sorry.
I guess I have gained a little
empathy. That’s a good thing.
My ski buddy and I on the lift. I swear it was so cold that time, I almost lost my nose. |
Actually, I would say that in
general, it hasn’t been a complete disaster. I have learned a little more patience. I have learned that my children don’t
really need me. What a great
compliment – they have learned enough to take care of themselves, sort of. (No one really folds their laundry, but
that was extra credit anyway.) I
have learned that I have the sweetest husband in the world. He is so patient. And I can’t help but think that somehow
this is all part of the plan. Some
times bad things have happened to me because I knew I was doing the wrong
thing. No. The whole day that I had my accident I
was where I was supposed to be, with my favorite people, doing one of my
favorite activities. It was all
part of the plan somehow.
I have been doing physical
therapy 2 times a week for the past 4 weeks. I went from not being able to bend my leg , to being a
pretty normal person. My injured
let started with the ability to bend to 80 degrees (my good leg was 150) and
ended yesterday at 147! I love my
physical therapist, Tiffany Zollinger.
She is just the right combination of encouraging and punishing. I ditched my crutches two weeks
ago. I feel my knee slide forward
whenever I walk up stairs, but other than that, I feel like a pretty normal
person with a brace and a limp, and one leg that is way weaker than the
other. Man, you wouldn’t believe
how fast my hamstring disappeared in my injured leg! It was hard work to get it back. It’s sad that I will have to start all over again tomorrow!
Dr. Manion said I will use
crutches for most of 6 weeks, and wait 4 months to run on a flat, controlled
surface, and 9 months before I do anything athletic. Good thing the snow sucks this year. I’m going to have a great time skiing
next year. Maybe.
It’s Feb. 4, 2013. Tomorrow morning is my surgery. I’m ready. I have already picked up my Continuous Passive Motion (CPM)
machine, aka “leg-o-matic” with instructions to keep my leg moving 6 – 8 hours
a day! Seriously. Am I supposed to sit 8 hours a day?! I’m lined up for an ice machine. My in-laws are coming to help out next
week. (Thank goodness!) I have the
first 3 seasons of Downton Abby to catch up on. And most importantly, I got a pedicure. If I’m going to be stuck looking at my
leg 8 hours a day, I better have nice toe nails!
Wish me luck. I’m nervous.
5 comments:
Oh man!!!! I am just cringing at the description of the fall-- yikes!!! I remember when Becki did that in HS. I felt so terrible for her, and now for you! If you decide to the the SLC marathon next year instead, I will take you out to dinner the night before and be there to cheer you on during the race! You will make a full recovery (positive vibes heading your way!). I would preferr "donated" parts myself to fix my knee, like you said.
I hope it's going well today! What an awesome mom you are. I'm sure your family will appreciate you so much more after this!
Wow--I am super impressed by your positive attitude, even as you were describing your accident, which, as Julie has said, is cringe-worthy! *shudder*
Best wishes for a speedy recovery.
Hope your recovery is quick. Hang in there.
My heart is with you, Juli!! I hope things are better now.
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