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After knee replacement surgery

Joint Replacements | Last Active: Oct 27, 2021 | Replies (618)

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@debbraw

Hey @johnbishop - I'm with @contentandwell - I am envious of being able to make it with no strong pain meds. I was taking oxycodone for 5 weeks, then tramadol for a few more. You are my pain management hero! I had staples on my first TKR and some other thing like glue or adhesive fabric on my 2nd. I have to warn you that taking out the staples was painful for me on my first TKR and they didn't warn me. I now tell all my friends who have staples to take their pain meds before going in for that appointment. Mine was at 2 weeks. One other thought, my physical therapist actually specializes in patients with lymphedema. It may be that there are therapists in your area with that expertise. Maybe worth checking. Oh, one question - are the supplements you are taking for neuropathy like vitamins or OTC meds? I'm curious about what they are and how they promote nerve health enough to mitigate this kind of pain. Do you mind sharing what they are? Keep us posted on how you progress. Wishing you the best!

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Replies to "Hey @johnbishop - I'm with @contentandwell - I am envious of being able to make it..."

Hi Debbra @debbraw -- Definitely not meds ☺ The group is anti meds for treating PN. Here's the link to my story and how I found the group: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/anyone-here-dealing-with-peripheral-neuropathy/?pg=42#comment-65985

The supplements I take for my neuropathy are over the counter vitamins, minerals and supplements I found through a closed Facebook group (http://www.facebook.com/groups/spnpd). They also have a website setup since they became a 501c3 which has links to order the elements - http://solutions2pnpd.com/products/. The ordering page is kind of hard to see the list of all the items but the instructions page is a little more readable. It's not a cure for neuropathy but it does help with the symptoms - more so with the pain according to members of the group (over 8,000 now). I think it's slowed and maybe stopped the progression of my neuropathy but it's subjective on my part. The Facebook group has a lot of documents they have put together since the group came together on the research as to why it works and how it helps. I love the group but the one thing they do not like is a new member who doesn't read all of the new member information and starts asking questions - it's really a self help, you are your own advocate type of group.

I'm really not sure if the supplements are the reason I don't have the pain or not but the surgeon's RN didn't have any problems when I told her I was not going to take any gabapentin as part of my recovery meds which was originally part of what they wanted to give to me. She had the list of everything I was taking and I explained to her that's my gabapentin only mine works without messing with my brain. She said OK and would run it by the surgeon...never heard back although he made a slight change in my supplements I take for my PN --dosage increase for my vitamin B12 in my list of supplement to start back on when I got back home.

@johnbishop ....After my first TKR while still on Iv pain meds, my pain level was sooooo high I maxed out the limits my surgeon allowed. I had been through many types of surgery, so it was not a new experience, but to this day I am still horrified by the memory of the pain. No one believed me. I was 42, and cried for 3 days in agony. I was terrified to go home with only pills and no help controlling the beast.I have always been a toughie. No whining, suck it up kinda girl. Well, the pain crushed me and turned me into mush. I don't know if the horrible condition of the joint contributed to the off the charts pain, or not. I do know that I had not walked properly on the leg since I was 14 and had my accident, then first surgery. Could it have been the fact that a correct joint forced proper conformation, which I had not had for all those years?

You are one of most that need their pain meds after TKR. For some, their knee actually feels BETTER right after surgery. Right away. That can not mean they suffered more than we did prior to surgery. In my case the joint was so distorted, I actually wore holes clear through parts of the joint, due to the mishapened bones. They found broken pieces of bone the size of almonds. Spurs so large I was the talk of the ortho department! I was always the one up and around, getting moving and actually helping roommates, sometimes just a few hours after my surgeries. Thank God, the second knee was, comparatively, a breeze. Oh, it hurt, but it didn't turn me into a blathering, out of my mind, crybaby.It was likely just what one would expect.

When you think about it, it's a wonder we don't all lose our minds due to pain. I mean, really, they just cut the top off one bone and the bottom off another...screwed on caps, removed our kneecaps and possiblely replaced it entirely....not to mention an incision bigger than a ruler. Yep. Pain med worthy, me thinks.