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Getbig Main Boards => Gossip & Opinions => Topic started by: Bindare_Dundat on January 31, 2018, 01:42:18 AM
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So yesterday the orthopedic surgeon verified what I had feared, I tore my left bicep. the only thing that isn't known is where the tear is, (tendon/bone, tendon/tendon, or tendon/muscle).
scheduled for surgery Monday.
He mentioned that healing will take up to 6 months before I can resume working again, (I'm a tradesman), and there really is no such thing as light duty in my field. Needless to say, I'm pretty bummed out at this prospect for several reasons, a few being financial and not being able to train properly.
Any other getbiggers go through this? what was the earliest you were able to get back to doing physical labour, training? Did the surgery return you to normal? anyone opt not to have surgery? How did that affect the look and functionally of your arm?
Thanks
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Partial tear in my tricep last May didn’t have surgery started training 5 weeks after back to normal strength has returned. Good luck.
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u tear types.. have u used a good amount of winstrol?
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Consider using BPC 157 and TB500 to heal quicker
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Pardon my ignorance what is a tradesman?
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Had a distal bicep tear just over 2 1/2 years ago. Other than the scar it's virtually unnoticeable. It was at least a year before I trained it with 100% intensity.
As far as doing any manual labour? Yeah, even 6 months is a conservative estimate. It all depends on the job, of course.
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Pardon my ignorance what is a tradesman?
PHYSICAL LABOURER...
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Tore my proximal head. Please refuse the shot they want to give you that deadens the nerve pre surgery. It’s a money maker and only helps deaden the pain when u awake. I wish I had refused. They actually have to prick the nerve with the needle which is ALWAYS a bad idea. This is what I firmly believe caused my nerve damage in my arm since the surgery. And I am not the only one that this has happened to. After suffering nerve damage from this surgery I began to research those who had gotten the pre-shot. Many have trouble because of it. The surgeon may scoff and the guy giving the shot will get pissed cuz he won’t make as much $ but my advice is to stay firm and don’t get it. It doesn’t affect the surgery one bit. Again it’s juts for pain relief when u awake. And yes I lost a lot of wages as u will. But you’ll be glad u did it. With my nerve damage it was over a year before I got back to work and my arm shakes, has less strength and coordination. And no I didn’t lose strength I’m my bicep. It’s actually stronger. Somehow he damaged the nerve that feeds my tricep. Good luck. 👍
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How'd you tear it?
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perhaps he did the classic two person bicep curl?
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How'd you tear it?
dunno who u r asking but as for me I’ve had a sour in my humerus since my martial arts days. Over the years my shoulder always hurt because as I’d move my arm my biceps tendon would roll over the sharp spur until one day it just snapped. This is I believe the most common reason for biceps tears in older men. Think of a movie with a mountain climber’s rope rubbing on a rock and fraying. If u have shoulder pain don’t wait and get an mri and get it diagnosed.
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dunno who u r asking but as for me I’ve had a spur on my humerus since my martial arts days. Over the years my shoulder always hurt because as I’d move my arm my biceps tendon would roll over the sharp spur until one day it just snapped. This is I believe the most common reason for biceps tears in older men. Think of a movie with a mountain climber’s rope rubbing on a rock and fraying. If u have shoulder pain don’t wait and get an mri and get it diagnosed.
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dunno who u r asking but as for me I’ve had a sour in my humerus since my martial arts days. Over the years my shoulder always hurt because as I’d move my arm my biceps tendon would roll over the sharp spur until one day it just snapped. This is I believe the most common reason for biceps tears in older men. Think of a movie with a mountain climber’s rope rubbing on a rock and fraying. If u have shoulder pain don’t wait and get an mri and get it diagnosed.
I was asking OP but that's interesting to know. This sort of stuff frightens me so I try to educate myself on what causes it in other guys.
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I was asking OP but that's interesting to know. This sort of stuff frightens me so I try to educate myself on what causes it in other guys.
dont worry, it only happens to people who actually lift weights
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I was asking OP but that's interesting to know. This sort of stuff frightens me so I try to educate myself on what causes it in other guys.
In my case I was lifting a 500lb+ glass tabletop with another person. I was off balance and lifted it incorrectly, essentially doing an approx 250lb db curl.
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In my case I was lifting a 500lb+ glass tabletop with another person. I was off balance and lifted it incorrectly, essentially doing an approx 250lb db curl.
Yes, I remember this. At least it healed without a glaring visual defect.
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Yes, I remember this. At least it healed without a glaring visual defect.
Agreed.
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That sucks. Surgery will take care of it, but I'd be more concerned about your finances more than anything else. Hopefully you have short/long term disability insurance. My brother is 40 y/o carpenter, he hurt his shoulder and back pretty bad. His long term disability and unemployment bennies ran out after 1 year. He cannot go on permanent government disability because it's not enough $ to support his wife and 3 young kids.
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Tore my proximal head. Please refuse the shot they want to give you that deadens the nerve pre surgery. It’s a money maker and only helps deaden the pain when u awake. I wish I had refused. They actually have to prick the nerve with the needle which is ALWAYS a bad idea. This is what I firmly believe caused my nerve damage in my arm since the surgery. And I am not the only one that this has happened to. After suffering nerve damage from this surgery I began to research those who had gotten the pre-shot. Many have trouble because of it. The surgeon may scoff and the guy giving the shot will get pissed cuz he won’t make as much $ but my advice is to stay firm and don’t get it. It doesn’t affect the surgery one bit. Again it’s juts for pain relief when u awake. And yes I lost a lot of wages as u will. But you’ll be glad u did it. With my nerve damage it was over a year before I got back to work and my arm shakes, has less strength and coordination. And no I didn’t lose strength I’m my bicep. It’s actually stronger. Somehow he damaged the nerve that feeds my tricep. Good luck. 👍
thanks for the info. there was no discussion about a pain shot. doctor actually seemed very knowledgeable and took his time explaining everything.
I should probably consider getting into another field while I have the time off although I make really good money doing what I do.
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That sucks. Surgery will take care of it, but I'd be more concerned about your finances more than anything else. Hopefully you have short/long term disability insurance. My brother is 40 y/o carpenter, he hurt his shoulder and back pretty bad. His long term disability and unemployment bennies ran out after 1 year. He cannot go on permanent government disability because it's not enough $ to support his wife and 3 young kids.
I have short term and long term through my union. I'm hoping that will cover me while I heal.
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Had a distal bicep tear just over 2 1/2 years ago. Other than the scar it's virtually unnoticeable. It was at least a year before I trained it with 100% intensity.
As far as doing any manual labour? Yeah, even 6 months is a conservative estimate. It all depends on the job, of course.
thanks bro. so did you end up having surgery? is that the scar your e referring to?
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Using people that I know who have had similar injuries, you’re looking at approximately a year before going back to Trades like plumbing, construction or carpentry. Electrician, 6 to 9 months. Good luck.
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Using people that I know who have had similar injuries, you’re looking at approximately a year before going back to Trades like plumbing, construction or carpentry. Electrician, 6 to 9 months. Good luck.
thanks
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thanks bro. so did you end up having surgery? is that the scar your e referring to?
Yep.
Strength, size and shape of the bicep are pretty much back to their pre-injury state now.
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Sorry you're going through that. You're not in Deutschland, are you?
"I brought up the subject of painkillers with my gynecologist weeks before my surgery. She said that I would be given ibuprofen. “Is that it?” I asked. “That’s what I take if I have a headache. The removal of an organ certainly deserves more.”
“That’s all you will need,” she said, with the body confidence that comes from a lifetime of skiing in crisp, Alpine air."
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/27/opinion/sunday/surgery-germany-vicodin.html
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thanks for the info. there was no discussion about a pain shot. doctor actually seemed very knowledgeable and took his time explaining everything.
I should probably consider getting into another field while I have the time off although I make really good money doing what I do.
Maybe consider the same field but doing something like project management. estimates, supervision...
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I tore my bicep completely off the forearm. The bicep rupture made my bicep roll up my arm toward my shoulder. There are muscle tears that doesn't require surgery but a torn tendon usually requires repair. When a tendon is partially torn or completely torn it needs to be repaired. The sooner the better. My doctor said for every week you wait the chances of success of the surgery goes down.
With me two metal anchors were inserted into the bone and the tendon was sewn back by the bone. I believe with time if it's a fresh injury it will in time grow back into the bone. I did professional rehabilitation and in time did my own thing. It was just a bicep but it effected everything in that arm. Took about a month before I even had full range of motion. I remember curling 2 pound dumbbells and it was hard. Guys with a partial tear have a much quicker recovery. I started lifting around month 3 and it was a joke. The bar for benches and other really light stuff. By month 5 I was lifting very modest weights. Month 6 I was almost fully back. I remember the complete terror I had when I attempted my first pull up. Thought I was going to rip the bicep off.
My advice is this. Find a surgeon that specializes in shoulders down repair. Any orthopedic that claims he does everything from knees, hips, shoulder, elbow and hands is someone you want to stay away from. An orthopedic practice by me has a shoulder guy only. A hip guy only. A knee guy and so on. You want an expert that specializes in one joint or at the most two.
I though I would never lift again. Seeing my bicep up by my shoulder and my shoulder drooping when it happened was disturbing. I did cardio every day 6 days a week during recovery. I would walk fast and long with my arm in a sling. In about 5 to 6 weeks I was running. Physically I felt amazing. Listen to your surgeon. Working too hard to get back can damage the repair. Work really hard but listen to the limitations of your doctor. Also get off the pain killers quick after the operation. I used it for one day and he gave me 5 day supply. On another memory I remember I had difficulty swallowing for a couple of days from a tube they put down my throat that must have hit a nerve there. That was really disturbing.
This happened to me about 15 years ago. I have shoulder problems now that I can't help feel is a result of the bicep injury. The bicep is slightly misshapen from the other but not drastically so. It's not like I had a chance of winning a bodybuilding competition. It's also a little unstable I guess from slight nerve damage. Much of my hand was numb like it had novacaine from nerve damage but that went away in time.
I can do pull ups, heavy curls, hit the heavy bag and deadlifts without worry now. Certain things I won't do like scott curls or do jui jitsu where a guy can arm bar that arm.
Good luck and know you are not the only one to have gone through this.
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What were you doing that caused the injury originally?
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What were you doing that caused the injury originally?
Me?
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Me?
Yes.
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I was in a bar with the wife shooting pool. I was drinking like a fish. I put the money in and just some of the balls came out. The bottom of the pool table was curved in. I thought I would dead lift one end of the table and get the balls to roll out. Never knew how much a commercial pool table weighed. I attempted to deadlift it grabbing the inward curved section on one end. I was lifting it in a semi curl position. I got it about a foot off the ground when I thought I was electrocuted. I felt like I was hit by an electric current. I dropped the table when it hit me what happened.
When I got home one shoulder was dropping and my bicep was rolled up toward my shoulder. I had a complete bicep rupture. I blame alcohol. LOL. Those commercial pool tables are seriously heavy.
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Oh yeah I think you've mentioned that before. Interesting how this often happens out of the gym..
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So yesterday the orthopedic surgeon verified what I had feared, I tore my left bicep. the only thing that isn't known is where the tear is, (tendon/bone, tendon/tendon, or tendon/muscle).
scheduled for surgery Monday.
He mentioned that healing will take up to 6 months before I can resume working again, (I'm a tradesman), and there really is no such thing as light duty in my field. Needless to say, I'm pretty bummed out at this prospect for several reasons, a few being financial and not being able to train properly.
Any other getbiggers go through this? what was the earliest you were able to get back to doing physical labour, training? Did the surgery return you to normal? anyone opt not to have surgery? How did that affect the look and functionally of your arm?
Thanks
don't worry you can still win the olympia 4 times
E
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dunno who u r asking but as for me I’ve had a spur in my humerus since my martial arts days. Over the years my shoulder always hurt because as I’d move my arm my biceps tendon would roll over the sharp spur until one day it just snapped. This is I believe the most common reason for biceps tears in older men. Think of a movie with a mountain climber’s rope rubbing on a rock and fraying. If u have shoulder pain don’t wait and get an mri and get it diagnosed.
Thoroughly interesting stuff so thanks for sharing. Questions about the spur: did they only realize the spur was causing friction on the bicep during surgery? Or in the MRI pre-surgery?
You mentioned the spur caused pain but did you know at the time it was the reason for the pain? Did they fix the spur...because if unremoved one can assume it will cause friction to the healed bicep?
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I tore my bicep completely off the forearm. The bicep rupture made my bicep roll up my arm toward my shoulder. There are muscle tears that doesn't require surgery but a torn tendon usually requires repair. When a tendon is partially torn or completely torn it needs to be repaired. The sooner the better. My doctor said for every week you wait the chances of success of the surgery goes down.
With me two metal anchors were inserted into the bone and the tendon was sewn back by the bone. I believe with time if it's a fresh injury it will in time grow back into the bone. I did professional rehabilitation and in time did my own thing. It was just a bicep but it effected everything in that arm. Took about a month before I even had full range of motion. I remember curling 2 pound dumbbells and it was hard. Guys with a partial tear have a much quicker recovery. I started lifting around month 3 and it was a joke. The bar for benches and other really light stuff. By month 5 I was lifting very modest weights. Month 6 I was almost fully back. I remember the complete terror I had when I attempted my first pull up. Thought I was going to rip the bicep off.
My advice is this. Find a surgeon that specializes in shoulders down repair. Any orthopedic that claims he does everything from knees, hips, shoulder, elbow and hands is someone you want to stay away from. An orthopedic practice by me has a shoulder guy only. A hip guy only. A knee guy and so on. You want an expert that specializes in one joint or at the most two.
I though I would never lift again. Seeing my bicep up by my shoulder and my shoulder drooping when it happened was disturbing. I did cardio every day 6 days a week during recovery. I would walk fast and long with my arm in a sling. In about 5 to 6 weeks I was running. Physically I felt amazing. Listen to your surgeon. Working too hard to get back can damage the repair. Work really hard but listen to the limitations of your doctor. Also get off the pain killers quick after the operation. I used it for one day and he gave me 5 day supply. On another memory I remember I had difficulty swallowing for a couple of days from a tube they put down my throat that must have hit a nerve there. That was really disturbing.
This happened to me about 15 years ago. I have shoulder problems now that I can't help feel is a result of the bicep injury. The bicep is slightly misshapen from the other but not drastically so. It's not like I had a chance of winning a bodybuilding competition. It's also a little unstable I guess from slight nerve damage. Much of my hand was numb like it had novacaine from nerve damage but that went away in time.
I can do pull ups, heavy curls, hit the heavy bag and deadlifts without worry now. Certain things I won't do like scott curls or do jui jitsu where a guy can arm bar that arm.
Good luck and know you are not the only one to have gone through this.
Thank you for spending the time and detailing your experience.
My situation is a partial tear and I'm praying it's at the bone and not the muscle as that is when the surgeon said he can not do anything about it.
your healing time gives me some hope in regards to my injury. I've seen videos and read posts of individuals that were back to lifting in a much shorter time then my surgeon had suggested and so I'm praying that a healthy lifestyle and years of weight training will help with recovery time. I also have a kit of quality growth hormone that I saved up and will incorporate in my healing regiment.
regarding the surgeon, yes, he only deals with bicep tears and has a long history of performing this type of repair. if its a tear that allows him to work on it he believes I should make a full recovery and have full use of arm again.
and yes, seeing my bicep sitting higher then it normally would was not pleasant.
thanks again for your post.
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So yesterday the orthopedic surgeon verified what I had feared, I tore my left bicep. the only thing that isn't known is where the tear is, (tendon/bone, tendon/tendon, or tendon/muscle).
scheduled for surgery Monday.
He mentioned that healing will take up to 6 months before I can resume working again, (I'm a tradesman), and there really is no such thing as light duty in my field. Needless to say, I'm pretty bummed out at this prospect for several reasons, a few being financial and not being able to train properly.
Any other getbiggers go through this? what was the earliest you were able to get back to doing physical labour, training? Did the surgery return you to normal? anyone opt not to have surgery? How did that affect the look and functionally of your arm?
Thanks
A few years ago I tore my right bicep picking up a couch.did not roll up my arm but went down.
Emergency room doc told me only people who took steroids tore their biceps ::) dude was an asshole and not any help.
I ended up going to another Dr a few days later and was told I needed surgery immediately.
I had surgery and did the whole rehab.
If you look at my bicep from the front you can see on the where the shoulder meets the top of the bi there is an indentation almost like a little of my bi is missing.
It's not as bad as some I've seen after tears but not like nothing ever happened either.
.
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tore my lateral head bicep left arm 3 years ago, had surgery 3 months later. back driving in two weeks working within a month.(construction) gotta be carefull though. took a year for it to feel normal again and another 6 months to regain lost strength.
did loads of cardio (stationary bike) gets blood pumping to help heal injury, started day after surgery. they always give you worst case scenario and its standard whether your 20 vs 70 years old.
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tore my lateral head bicep left arm 3 years ago, had surgery 3 months later. back driving in two weeks working within a month.(construction) gotta be carefull though. took a year for it to feel normal again and another 6 months to regain lost strength.
did loads of cardio (stationary bike) gets blood pumping to help heal injury, started day after surgery. they always give you worst case scenario and its standard whether your 20 vs 70 years old.
what trade are you in bro?
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road construction laying asphalt (tarmac)
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Partial tear in my left back in 02 playing around with my niece (jumping off newspaper boxes waiting outside a sushi place). Had insurance but said surgery wasn't needed. Not much pain, just stiffness. Backed off certain movements for a while, i forget how long, but when i stated curls again my bi felt like Styrofoam ( felt like I could hear styrofoam crunching during the movement even though nobody else could hear it). Lost somef muscle control and dexterity in that bicep even though it was a small partial tear. Took a good year to get over it psychologically
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Partial tear in my left back in 02 playing around with my niece (jumping off newspaper boxes waiting outside a sushi place). Had insurance but said surgery wasn't needed. Not much pain, just stiffness. Backed off certain movements for a while, i forget how long, but when i stated curls again my bi felt like Styrofoam ( felt like I could hear styrofoam crunching during the movement even though nobody else could hear it). Lost somef muscle control and dexterity in that bicep even though it was a small partial tear. Took a good year to get over it psychologically
(https://media1.tenor.com/images/bf49d7b51b48fdfaf07c9ed2eba324e9/tenor.gif?itemid=5729500)
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Sorry you're going through that. You're not in Deutschland, are you?
"I brought up the subject of painkillers with my gynecologist weeks before my surgery. She said that I would be given ibuprofen. “Is that it?” I asked. “That’s what I take if I have a headache. The removal of an organ certainly deserves more.”
“That’s all you will need,” she said, with the body confidence that comes from a lifetime of skiing in crisp, Alpine air."
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/27/opinion/sunday/surgery-germany-vicodin.html
"I did say that this story is not about the benefits of universal health care, but for the sake of accuracy, let me add that this hysterectomy was not without cost. After my surgery, I had to pay $25 for the taxi ride home. "
I love Germany's and Dutchland's healthcare. Usa take note.... everybody fully covered, everybody automaticly insured, no exception, no limits, high tech healthcare. Cost?? 150 euro per month.
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"I did say that this story is not about the benefits of universal health care, but for the sake of accuracy, let me add that this hysterectomy was not without cost. After my surgery, I had to pay $25 for the taxi ride home. "
I love Germany's and Dutchland's healthcare. Usa take note.... everybody fully covered, everybody automaticly insured, no exception, no limits, high tech healthcare. Cost?? 150 euro per month.
I asked the author if she could go back in time & choose door “Deutschland” or door “America” for the procedure, which would she choose, and she chose the former.
Does anyone know what German veterinarians administer to animals after surgery?
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(https://media1.tenor.com/images/bf49d7b51b48fdfaf07c9ed2eba324e9/tenor.gif?itemid=5729500)
Took you 3 minutes to.reply to my comment with a meme implying I'm lying. Yet with your obsession with me, we are all well aware that have seen me mention my bicep tear many times over the years going back nearly 2 decades. Yet your insecurities prevents you from taking every opportunity to call me a liar.
How Jeffy-poo should deal with obsession with men he's jealous of (https://www.google.com/amp/s/m.wikihow.com/Deal-with-Obsession-As-an-Autistic-Person%3famp=1)
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Sorry you're going through that. You're not in Deutschland, are you?
"I brought up the subject of painkillers with my gynecologist weeks before my surgery. She said that I would be given ibuprofen. “Is that it?” I asked. “That’s what I take if I have a headache. The removal of an organ certainly deserves more.”
“That’s all you will need,” she said, with the body confidence that comes from a lifetime of skiing in crisp, Alpine air."
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/27/opinion/sunday/surgery-germany-vicodin.html
If she got what she wanted, I wonder how likely it would be that she would blame that Doctor for her opoid addiction?
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Took you 3 minutes to.reply to my comment with a meme implying I'm lying. Yet with your obsession with me, we are all well aware that have seen me mention my bicep tear many times over the years going back nearly 2 decades. Yet your insecurities prevents you from taking every opportunity to call me a liar.
How Jeffy-poo should deal with obsession with men he's jealous of (https://www.google.com/amp/s/m.wikihow.com/Deal-with-Obsession-As-an-Autistic-Person%3famp=1)
Nope, not lying, just shoe horning yourself into every topic with a personal experience story.
Maybe I should start a thread about erectile dysfunction so you can explain how your cock is droopier than everyone else's.
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Nope, not lying, just shoe horning yourself into every topic with a personal experience story.
Maybe I should start a thread about erectile dysfunction so you can explain how your cock is droopier than everyone else's.
This is a discussion board. The topic was torn biceps. I tore my bicep in 01 so I shared my experience. See how that works? Maybe your insecurity should preclude you from participating in these discussion boards.
Btw. Since the topic is, like I reminded you, TORN BICEPS. Have you torn a bicep? If so, contribute your experience. If not, go fuck up another thread.
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This is a discussion board. The topic was torn biceps. I tore my bicep in 01 so I shared my experience. See how that works? Maybe your insecurity should preclude you from participating in these discussion boards.
Btw. Since the topic is, like I reminded you, TORN BICEPS. Have you torn a bicep? If so, contribute your experience. If not, go fuck up another thread.
No, I'm not a moron who tries to lift beyond my means because I cant control my ego...
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No, I'm not a moron who tries to lift beyond my means because I cant control my ego...
Then why are you posting in the thread?
Nice to see that autistic brain thinking inside the box again, as its completely impossible to tear a bicep doing anything outside of "lifting" and "ego".
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Then why are you posting in the thread?
Nice to see that autistic brain thinking inside the box again, as its completely impossible to tear a bicep doing anything outside of "lifting" and "ego".
Go and read other peoples cause of bicep tears...
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Thoroughly interesting stuff so thanks for sharing. Questions about the spur: did they only realize the spur was causing friction on the bicep during surgery? Or in the MRI pre-surgery?
You mentioned the spur caused pain but did you know at the time it was the reason for the pain? Did they fix the spur...because if unremoved one can assume it will cause friction to the healed bicep?
i had shoulder pain for over 20 years prior the the tear. Hurt it in the martial arts as a kid. So as I said as I would move my arm it was fraying the bicep tendon. I can’t really fault myself for waiting to get it checked til after it snapped because often to correct pain from this common situation is for the surgeon to perform a tenodesis which is snipping the frayed bicep even before it snaps then reattaching the cut tendon where it is full and not frayed. I’m on a phone so meaning the snip it cut off the frayed end and reattach it. So even if I would have had it checked before it snapped they most likely would have cut it anyway.
The spur was found after it snapped cuz I never saw a doctor for my shoulder pain prior to that. And theoretically since the bicep is a 2 joint Muscle meaning it crosses 2 joints the top rubbed on the spur on the top of my humerus which frayed it. When a proximal bicep tear is repaired the surgeon turn it into a one joint muscle. It cross the elbow on its insertion but the Long head never again crosses the shoulder joint as it is reinserted lower into the shaft of the humerus. So even if they didn’t clean up the spur which they did the bicep would never even come close to rubbing on the spur again. But the spur was just starting to rub into my shoulder girdle/roatator cuff.
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Had my surgery today. Everything wentbreallybwell according to the surgeon. Arms throbbing pretty badly right now.
Hoping for as quick a recovery as my body is capable of.
Thanks to everyone for insight into their own experiences.
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Take the pain killers for a day or two then throw them away. You don't want them for anything over 5 days. I was in a lot of pain the second day. Took the Oxycontin and then I was laughing watching tv. The next day I took nothing and threw the bottle in the garbage.
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Take the pain killers for a day or two then throw them away. You don't want them for anything over 5 days. I was in a lot of pain the second day. Took the Oxycontin and then I was laughing watching tv. The next day I took nothing and threw the bottle in the garbage.
Appreciate the advice.
yeah. I refused the Percocet they offered after surgery for the ride home and am half dosing the oxy and other meds that are narcotic in nature.
I personally hate the way they make me feel. I'm not a downer type of guy. gonna hit the gym tomorrow and do some cardio.
start some good quality GH I have and BPC157 this week as well. hoping that will help speed healing along.
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Appreciate the advice.
yeah. I refused the Percocet they offered after surgery for the ride home and am half dosing the oxy and other meds that are narcotic in nature.
I personally hate the way they make me feel. I'm not a downer type of guy. gonna hit the gym tomorrow and do some cardio.
start some good quality GH I have and BPC157 this week as well. hoping that will help speed healing along.
Did the doc run a pain numbing string in your arm?
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Did the doc run a pain numbing string in your arm?
no. not that I am aware of. I was put under and don't have a clue what the protocol is regarding the pain shot you mentioned.
I can move all my fingers and don't feel any numbness anywhere on my arm but then again it's all casted and dressed up so I won't know the severity of any problems that might have occured until 2 weeks from now when they remove this giant thing. lol