Sunday, May 30, 2010

Deciding to get surgery

Deciding to get surgery was a tough decision for me. FAI impingement and labral tears are not exact sciences in the way that an ACL tear in the knee or a rotator cuff tear in the shoulder are. The latter two are no brainers and there are several doctors in Austin I would go see for those procedures without hesitation. But with FAI impingement the more I researched the surgery, the more I became wary.

Quickly I decided that I would have to travel as few surgeons in Texas specialized in hip arthroscopy. If you needed a new hip altogether, there were plenty of Dr's to choose from. But if you needed bone spurs shaved down and labrums repaired arthroscopically, there were just very few qualified to do it.

I also debated for many months whether I even needed the surgery at all. I read many horror stories on the internet of people whose surgery went wrong and now they were worse than before. But I realized that people whose surgery went well probably were out there living their life rather than writing on internet chat rooms.

And when I started looking at the long term research, FAI impingement was fairly common amongst young athletic men. As long as it was detected early and operated on properly, many of them went back to their sports and most studies showed an 85% success rate after 10 years. For surgery, those are pretty good odds.

Still I wasn't convinced so I cut back on all my activities, got PRP injections (Platelet Rich Plasma, it's supposed to stimulate cartilage growth) into the hip and waited. As long as I did very little, my hip hurt very little. So after a few months the choice became clear: continue to baby the hip and be pain free, or get the surgery and get back to an active life. I decided that even though calling myself "young" or "athletic" may have been a bit of a stretch, I didn't feel so old or unathletic as wanting to have to worry about the consequences of going for a run or a hike when I felt like it.

I did tons of research of which Doctor to go to. In a way it was a great limitation to have no real local option. It meant anywhere in the US was fair game. Many of the top ones were used to out of state patients so getting the surgery and leaving a few days later would not be a big deal.

Now along the way of realizing I had a bad hip, I thought I had injured the groin muscle of my other hip. But when I talked to several Dr's who looked at x-rays of both my hips, they told me there was a high likelihood that I had impingement in both hips and would probably get labral tears on both sides as a result. Again I had a dilemma as the idea of flying somewhere once to get surgery didn't seem too bad. But to go out there once, get the surgery, be on crutches for 6 weeks, finally recover only to go do it for the other hip basically meant being out of action for 6 months. But I figured 6 months over a life time isn't that long a time period, so mentally it was what I was ready to do.

But as luck would have it, one of the Dr's in LA that I contacted said his company couldn't help anyone out of network, but he recommended I contact Dr Thomas Sampson out of San Francisco. Dr Sampson ended up emailing me before I contacted him and offered any help he could. This was when I was still trying PRP and other things so we played telephone tag but I never actually spoke to him.

Finally after spending five months looking for other answers, I had decided to get the surgery and was actually pretty set on going with another Dr when I decided that I should at least talk to Dr Sampson. I mainly wanted to be reassured that I was doing the right thing and since he had been the most accessible of any of the surgeons I wanted to go with, I also wanted to hear from an expert in the field as to what I should expect. I'd mainly been talking to people who knew a little about the condition, but Dr Sampson has been doing hip surgery for 25 years and has been a leading innovator in hip arthroscopy for at least 10 years.

I called his office and they scheduled a time for him to call me the next day. The other Dr's office actually called me about 20 minutes before he was supposed to call me and I didn't answer their call. I just wanted some reassurance, someone who knew the subject matter better than anyone to tell me it would be okay. I got a lot more than that.

I was able to talk to one of the top surgeons in the world for over half an hour with no assumption of any financial gain. I got to talk to a man who was experienced but still highly passionate and constantly searching for new ways to do what he does even better. Dr Sampson explained in great detail how his technique varied in almost every aspect, from where he started the surgery, to the amount of time the hip is in traction, to his philosophy on whether crutches were needed post operatively.

He also said that it was likely I had labral tears and impingement in both hips and that he had done the operation on both hips together many times. He recommended it so that the body did not compensate for the "good" hip quickly turning it into the "worse" hip. He also said that many of the studies he had personally done over the years showed that there was no difference in terms of recovery rate, cartilage reformation and pain levels of people who were on crutches for 6 weeks after surgery vs those who were on them only a few days after surgery. He told me exactly what he thought was happening in my condition in terms of the labrum and the cartilage and that he was very certain he could fix my condition.

By the end of the conversation I realized there was no one else on the planet that I could go to. I told him I'd be seeing him soon and a little over a month later, I was in his office meeting him for the first time.

11 comments:

  1. How did the surgery go? I too have a torn hip labrum and am about to try PRP to treat it, although I have mentally prepared myself for surgery as well. Hope you are back to 100%.

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  2. Hi, I have 2 hip labral tears as well and I wanted to know how everything turned out for you in addition to other questions. It would be much appreciated if you could email me at jamuoio@yahoo.com becuase I don't know where to go from here. Thank you very much.

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  3. I hope that the surgery went well. God bless

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  4. I hope that your surgery went well! I'm currently evaluating my options. A conservative lifestyle or a surgery. If you can post an update that would be really helpful! All the best!

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  5. Hi. Did you have your surgery with Dr. Byrd? How did it go? I am scheduling surgery with him as well. If you can leave me a message on my blog I would greatly appreciate it. Then, I'll delete your comment once I read it.

    jaydesjourney.com

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  6. This was an extremely helpful post. I am debating surgery myself and have impingement in both hips as well.
    Thank you!

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  7. How was your outcome? Thanks.

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  8. One more, wondering what your outcome was like post-op, or if it ever came to that? I'm about 10 weeks post-op from old hardware removal/femoral intramedullary nail placement, but it sounds like I might have a labral tear on top of things. Despite working in medicine and having in been in ortho in the past, not finding much for clear concise outcome studies.

    Hope all went for the best!

    Erika

    BTW, if you're willing, I'd be interested in a guest post from you on my website for athletes dealing with injury, wherever you consider yourself on the "athlete" spectrum! www.offtheDL.com

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  9. No update?!? C'mon! I'd really like to know how this turned out for you.

    Meanwhile, I'll just assume that it went so well that you've been out doing so many amazing things that you completely forgot about your blog.

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  10. What happened with the surgery??? My son has a torn hip labrum as well and considering surgery vs trying prp and othe similar injections. Please follow up on your blog Thank you!

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    ReplyDelete