Guest guest Posted April 15, 2003 Report Share Posted April 15, 2003 Joe I bet there sexy plates for sure..LOL Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 15, 2003 Report Share Posted April 15, 2003 Joe I bet there sexy plates for sure..LOL Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 16, 2003 Report Share Posted April 16, 2003 Hi Toni, I was downhill skiing in Tahoe, along a series of 5-6' jumps. I skated down to the 1st jump for more momentum (1st mistake) to catch up w/my family, my mind on my daughter. The first few jumps were fine. On the 5th jump, I realized mid-air that I was going too fast & had too much air, while suddenly noticing that the next jump popped up sooner than I'd expected. I thought I was going to break a leg. LOL. I decided to raise my legs & skis as high as I could (2nd error) to clear the ledge & land safely before the next jump. I remember just barely feeling the tips of the end of my skis barely brushing the ledge, & then my back hit the ledge. Next thing I knew I was in a fog of pain. It was worse than childbirth (piece of cake), worse than my ruptured ectopic pregnancy (nearly died of profuse blood loss-ER thought I had a stomach ache till my ultrasound). People stopped to help & were so kind. I couldn't answer their inquiries, as I was fighting to just breathe. I hadn't fallen in 15 yrs, & then this spectacular spill. Do you still ski, given that you've had a spinal injury? I'd like to hear that you do - to give me hope. How did you injure yourself, if I might ask? sonia Re: Spinal Injury Importance: High Hi ! I just saw you your post, and I am also a skier. Do you mind telling me what happened as far as the accident...exactly what caused your injury? Toni At 09:26 04/14/2003 +0000, you wrote: >Hi, >I'm new & hoping to hear some advice. I've been wearing a TLSO for ~2 >mos. for an L1 burst fracture (+fractured pedicles L2-L6) & T6 >compression fracture (no surgery yet; doc will decide at mo#3--scary) >from a ski accident. Had 40% narrowing of my spinal column & I know >I'm extremely lucky to be walking. My doctor wants to wean me from >Vicodin, & though I bite the bullet & am down to 10-15 mg/day, I >can't imagine being active w/o pain meds. My orthopaedist wants me >to start PT, but w/o Vicodin. Is this realistic (i.e., am I being a >wimp) or what? I've tried Vioxx, ibuprophen, Motrin, etc. & they're >not cutting the pain. I'd appreciate hearing from any that have had >similar experiences. >sonia > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 16, 2003 Report Share Posted April 16, 2003 - Welcome to our group, and so sorry that you have to be here. I must say that I haven't read anything to top what you have been through. You've written things that I'm still checking out on web sites. LOL I'm hoping that things are going better for you and that you will have the minimal number of surgeries needed. I was wondering if a TENS unit might not be something that could help you. I'm taking Vicodin for a simple herniated disc and I feel like a whimp now. Well, to my credit, I've gone through 2 previous surgeries for 3 other herniated discs. All I have to show for it is 2 titanium plates and scars to impress the ladies at parties. joe Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 16, 2003 Report Share Posted April 16, 2003 - Welcome to our group, and so sorry that you have to be here. I must say that I haven't read anything to top what you have been through. You've written things that I'm still checking out on web sites. LOL I'm hoping that things are going better for you and that you will have the minimal number of surgeries needed. I was wondering if a TENS unit might not be something that could help you. I'm taking Vicodin for a simple herniated disc and I feel like a whimp now. Well, to my credit, I've gone through 2 previous surgeries for 3 other herniated discs. All I have to show for it is 2 titanium plates and scars to impress the ladies at parties. joe Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 16, 2003 Report Share Posted April 16, 2003 Joe, My, my, your group exhibits my kind of keyboard logorrhea & you all are simply too funny. I don’t recall who told the elephant dung story, but what a way to go, & I couldn’t help myself tittering morbidly. The doc that initially treated me up north notes that my fitness helped tremendously in keeping me from being paralyzed. I’m lucky that my orthopaedist has dealt b4 w/one case of burst fracture. I avoided reading about burst fractures till quite recently, as it’s quite depressing & scary. I’ve lived w/pain since I was a kid (arthritis), but now the hardest thing is to act like a couch potato. Not my cup of tea at all. I miss running at the beach, I miss my push-ups, I even miss my abdominal crunches. I’ve had my share of needles, & I feel for you. The pain of a poke is gauged best by the width of the needle, not so much its length. Yet 24” is unimaginable. Saying “ouch” seems so piteously inadequate. sonia Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 16, 2003 Report Share Posted April 16, 2003 Joe, My, my, your group exhibits my kind of keyboard logorrhea & you all are simply too funny. I don’t recall who told the elephant dung story, but what a way to go, & I couldn’t help myself tittering morbidly. The doc that initially treated me up north notes that my fitness helped tremendously in keeping me from being paralyzed. I’m lucky that my orthopaedist has dealt b4 w/one case of burst fracture. I avoided reading about burst fractures till quite recently, as it’s quite depressing & scary. I’ve lived w/pain since I was a kid (arthritis), but now the hardest thing is to act like a couch potato. Not my cup of tea at all. I miss running at the beach, I miss my push-ups, I even miss my abdominal crunches. I’ve had my share of needles, & I feel for you. The pain of a poke is gauged best by the width of the needle, not so much its length. Yet 24” is unimaginable. Saying “ouch” seems so piteously inadequate. sonia Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 26, 2008 Report Share Posted November 26, 2008 Hello, I'm new to this group, and in 1986, I suffered a back injury that affected L4,L5, & S1 causing a compound disc. Anyone else in the group with the same type of back injury that is also incontinent? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 31, 2011 Report Share Posted March 31, 2011 Dear Here are some protocols that might help you working with the SCIO.All the Best QuantuMedical BioEnergetic Medicine SCIO-INDIGO ”No problem can be solved from the conscious that created it. We must learn to see the world anew.”Albert Einstein QuantuMedical Praxis Schwerpunkt: BioEnergetic Medicine - Ehret Diät - SCIO Energy Scan Branco Dipl. Hom. - Quantum Medicine - SCIO Trainer Terminvereinbarung Baseler Straße 12 12205 Berlin Fon +49 (0)30 30 10 11 63 Mobil +49 (0)176 20796804 www.quantumedical.com From: tarridas@...Date: Sat, 19 Mar 2011 03:52:53 -0700Subject: spinal injury Dear group. I¨m new in the group. My friend Muriel had a crash with the motorbike 11 years ago and she can´t move her legs sense, she literaly squashed her vertebra towards the inside of the spine. Bone peaces where removed after several surgeries, some lateral nerves help her move her legs and sit even doctor said she was not going to move from a bed. She is being treated with the quantum scio for the past month to try to make body be aware of that lesion in the spinal and help her in the healing process. This is to ask you all if anyone has worked successfully on a case like her, if you know of any doctor with experience on this type of lesions and quantum scio that could help us with the protocol for my friend. Her doctor said that spinal builds a wall like absess do too to protect liquid from spinal to spread out anymore. That wall aparently is also a impediment of awareness of harm and being aware of her lesion is something that quantum scio can be doing good work on. Thank you very much for your suggestions, Tarrida 3 of 3 File(s) Healing mantraSCIO.doc Trauma.doc Healing Frequencies.doc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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