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@ellerbracke Good afternoon......I am interested in your finding that the TKR knee has caused an uneven gait and pain in the left leg. That is very concerning. I have had bone spurs and arthritis in the right "good" leg. Tried the cortisone injections and it took a few weeks for them to work. You can only have 1 or 2 per year so I decided to just keep walking and enduring. Sometimes you just reach a point when enough is enough. What have you done in addition to orthotics? What do you do in the summer with sandals? Does heat or cold help? Why is the TKR leg longer? How did you measure it? Any clue?

As I relate to this, I also realize that my reverse shoulder has left me with a right arm that is 2" longer than the good one. My surgeon told me to expect that and so I never gave it much thought. It is a problem because I cannot eat with my right hand. Nor can I do anything that requires coordination. You should see my push ups.....LOL. The one positive outcome. I became ambidextrous for most tasks so I can use the non-surgical arm.

Please share with me as your story evolves. And be content and at peace today. Chris

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Replies to "@ellerbracke Good afternoon......I am interested in your finding that the TKR knee has caused an uneven..."

@artscaping : I’ll try to be concise. The hip bursitis (repeated episodes), as well as the gait problems were supposedly caused by differences in leg length. At least, that’s the only thing that was likely to produce those symptoms without any other factors. Whether the TKR was the cause of the length difference, or whether I have had uneven legs all my life, and it was simply aggravated by the surgery, nobody knows. The actual length difference is “only” 1/3”, but that can still cause a lot of trouble. My PT said that I may eventually get used to living with the discrepancy, but because I had already gone through 2 episodes of hip bursitis, as well that I have a decade long history of sciatica, he strongly advised custom orthotics to prevent further episodes. I use them when I’m very active and on my feet a lot, but still go barefoot or wear sandals part of the day. Or, for example, when I do yard work, where because of the terrain my legs would anyway never be level respective to each other, I don’t use the orthotics either.
Other than judicious use of the inserts, I do a 10 minute set of leg/back exercises to keep my sciatica in check (every day, 5 years running now), I walk 2 miles 5 to 6 days a week, and most days do 30 squats or 20 bridges, or both, or something similar, and do roughly 1 to 2 hours of yard work per day. Just turned 70 recently, and in generally decent shape (both health-wise, and weight-wise.... proud to be 37-29-37!!!!!) = Not my social security # 🙂...