The abbreviated version of this saga is that the hip replacement will have to wait for a more pressing surgery. I have a bulging disc in my neck, spinal stenosis and a pinched nerve. To relieve the symptoms, I will undergo an anterior cervical discectomy and fusion or ACDF in surgical lingo.
Warning: the squeamish may want to skip this description of the procedure. The surgeon will reach the neck through an incision in the throat area and remove two damaged discs in my neck, replacing them with cadaver bone grafts. The bone grafts and vertebrae are fixed in place with a titanium plate.
Sounds like a pain in the neck, right? But I have new found wisdom. This surgery is scheduled January 14 in deference to my triskaidekaphobia (fear of number 13). Despite the complicated neck procedure, the neurosurgeon assured me this is a routine, minimally invasive operation.
Warning: the squeamish may want to skip this description of the procedure. The surgeon will reach the neck through an incision in the throat area and remove two damaged discs in my neck, replacing them with cadaver bone grafts. The bone grafts and vertebrae are fixed in place with a titanium plate.
Sounds like a pain in the neck, right? But I have new found wisdom. This surgery is scheduled January 14 in deference to my triskaidekaphobia (fear of number 13). Despite the complicated neck procedure, the neurosurgeon assured me this is a routine, minimally invasive operation.
Moments after those soothing words, he added somberly: "I am required to advise you that the surgery is not risk free. You could die. You could be paralyzed." He smiled and reassured, "But that has never happened to one of my patients." I hope he has done more than one of these procedures.
Surgery requires a one day hospital stay, which means eating suspicious clumps of nourishment. Hospital food is an oxymoron. Medical facilities should offer an optional fast food meal delivered by DoorDash or UberEats. Hospitals remain stuck in the 19th food century.
Once released from Hell's Kitchen, I will be required to wear a soft white neck collar for two to three weeks. I plan to make the best of it. Here's my thought: Wear a black sports coat and black shirt with the white collar. Everyone will assume I am a priest and start unburdening their consciences to me.
I might hang around the confessional at my Catholic church at odd hours hoping to snag some unsuspecting sinner. Or I could visit retirement homes and run the bingo game. This may turn into a permanent gig in retirement. Father Roy has a nice ring to it. But without the celibate canon.
Once I recover, I am skedaddling to an orthopedic doc to schedule hip surgery. Two surgeries in the same year are like winning the military draft lottery during the Vietnam War. I knew I should have opted for the extended body parts warranty when it was offered 73 years ago. Too late now.
Some of you (the few still reading) may wonder how I went from hip to neck surgery in the blink of a surgeon's eye. For the curious, let me explain. I had been dealing with neck and shoulder pain for about seven months. Remedies failed to relieve my symptoms and the pain worsened.
The first neurosurgeon who viewed the MRI of my neck assured me I did not need surgery. In fact, he diagnosed the problem was in my shoulder. Likely a muscle spasm or possibly a pinched nerve. I gulped pills to no avail. After a few exasperating months, I checked in with a shoulder specialist.
She ordered physical therapy. Two months later my status was quo. A few steroid shorts and physiotherapy followed. No change. If anything, the pain escalated. Next stop a pain management specialist who looked at my MRI and announced, "Your neck sucks." Those are my words not his.
At last, I was encouraged to at least know what was causing my shoulder pain. I found the best neurosurgeon and the rest, as they say, is medical history. He advised that hip surgery might cause damage to my spine. That sober warning prompted my decision to have the neck repaired first.
Along my medical journey, I gained a few valuable lessons. Always trust what your body is telling you. Doctors can view MRI's, X-rays and perform physical examinations for a diagnosis. But they cannot get inside your body and feel the pain. You own the pain and you own your body.
Never unquestioningly accept a doctor's diagnosis. It is better to be skeptical, to ask questions and, perhaps, to get another medical opinion. After my initial diagnosis, I wish I had reached out to another neuro specialist. But hindsight is a sower of doubt and regrets. I prefer to live in the present.
That's why you need a healthy dose of Faith to make it through the medical hoops and physical distress of pain. I know God is leading me, even though the route has been circuitous. All in God's time not mine. I may have doubts about doctors in general, but none about my Faith.
If you know a prayer, please recite one for my speedy recovery. (If you don't pray, just avoid being within 100 miles of lightning storms.)
If you know a prayer, please recite one for my speedy recovery. (If you don't pray, just avoid being within 100 miles of lightning storms.)
Until I am able to pound a keyboard again, I will take a medical sabbatical. I will miss creating these columns. Writing is a passion of mine. However, soon I will be back at my desk, gazing at my computer and tapping the keyboard. Only then, it will be without pain in my neck and shoulder.
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