Last follow-up this morning. I expect in another couple of months I'll make an appointment to deal with the pain *not* fixed by surgery. Until all the phantom sensations fade a bit it'll be awfully hard to figure anything out.
Yes, she had a tourniquet around each ankle during surgery. (That explains a lot.)
My feet will be permanently wider than before. However, right now they're probably even bigger than their final size.
I have cards for two pedorthists, who can at least tell me what shoes (not?) to buy. My doctor also recommends New Balance. She thinks I can get mass-produced shoes.
My right foot, more full of weird sensations, also has more scar tissue. I should massage that.
I did have stitches, dissolvable ones. There's no sign of them now.
We pulled off the surgical strips. Pic later.
Yes, she had a tourniquet around each ankle during surgery. (That explains a lot.)
My feet will be permanently wider than before. However, right now they're probably even bigger than their final size.
I have cards for two pedorthists, who can at least tell me what shoes (not?) to buy. My doctor also recommends New Balance. She thinks I can get mass-produced shoes.
My right foot, more full of weird sensations, also has more scar tissue. I should massage that.
I did have stitches, dissolvable ones. There's no sign of them now.
We pulled off the surgical strips. Pic later.
no subject
I was a little surprised, since my current NBs are pretty wide and I can't even get my foot inside them. But hey, if it'll work, great. I'll drop by the NB store again in a month or two, when I hope to be down to my new size.
no subject
oops, trying again with brackets corrected
When I was a little girl I wanted to find a doctor who would be willing to cut off my little toe, and take away the metatarsal and shave down the cuboid, so that I could fit into shoes. Little did I know how right I was that that's how bad my feet really were.