Guest guest Posted April 6, 2000 Report Share Posted April 6, 2000 Hi all, Barbara from Bethesda, MD, here. Alice's (age 8) surgery has been scheduled for May 3 in Wilmington, Delaware at the Alfred I duPont Hospital for Children. It will be performed by Dr. Jayakumar, otherwise known as Dr. Jay. In mid February the duPont gait lab performed a 3 hour gait analysis on Alice, where she was video-taped by six different cameras from different angles simultaneously. They also measured her respiratory functions and had her walk on special mats that were hooked up to computers that projected her footprints on a monitor. The footprints looked like color-coded topigraphical maps showing the weight bearing areas of her soles in gradations. It was very cool, although I have no idea whether it is valuable or merely hi-tech hype. Anyway, Dr. Jay wants to release the muscles creating Alice's high arches (plantar facias) and transfer the posterior tibial tendon to the forefoot so the it will lift the front of her foot (meaning it performs the job that the peroneal muscles no longer perform). He adamantly stated that he would not surgically lengthen the achilles, because he felt it would weaken it. Rather, he will do a series of post-operative casts that gradually stretch Alice's achilles tendon. Initially, he thought he would have to break the first metatarsal bones to get Alice's feet to lay flat on the ground (she now walks on the outer edges of her feet). After the gait analysis and x-rays, however, he no longer thinks he has to do this. He believes that he can correct with only soft tissue procedures. As some of you know, I have traveled far and wide (Boston, NJ, DC, MD)to interview doctors for Alice's surgery. The last surgical evaluation, done at s Hopkins left me so depressed (which I am prone to anyway). Among other things, the orthopedist there said that I had waited too long to move on Alice's surgery -- that she now had boney deformities. That doctor wanted to lengthen the achilles tendon, calcaneal osteotomies (heel bone surgery) and a split tendon transfer using only part of the Posterior tibial tendon. They were quite frank that boney surgery at this age would cause some permanent rigidities that cause a new set of problems. To be honest, I don't know if I am going with duPont because they told me what I want to hear or because they really do know what's best. I have educated myself about this disease and its management, and I felt that the folks at duPont were the most thorough. (By the way, I did like the people at Boston Children's too, but duPont is closer to us)They were also the only ones who could pull files on other patients who have CMT. All I can say is that I have made a decision. I hope it is the right one. Finally, if any of you have tips on managing the recuperation period with a child in two leg casts, I would appreciate hearing from you. Thanks. Barbara Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.