![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Marie,
CONSERVE® Total Hip with BFH® Technology Recipient
But it was not routine when she ordered an artificial hip joint, other medical supplies, and lined up a surgeon, an anesthesiologist and support staff for a June 6, 2005, hip-replacement surgery. This time she was coordinating her own surgery. “I called up Barb at Wright Medical and placed an order for a Big Femoral Head and a Metal-on-Metal prosthesis in my size, just like I would for any other patient,” Mariel, 64, said. “Barb and I laughed about it, because it was a little strange.”
In her mid- to late-50s, Marie’s pain progressed until she could feel bone on bone in her right hip, and every step she took was painful. If she sat down for a period of time it became extremely painful to get back up and walk. The motion of getting in and out of a car was one of the most difficult and painful, she said.
It affected her sleep because the pain would awaken her every time she made a slight shift in position. As a result, she suffered symptoms of sleep depravation – feeling very low physical energy and a lack of mental concentration. “In this kind of work you just can’t allow that to happen,” she said. “Aside from being on your feet all day, constantly in motion, you need the mental capacity to keep up with lots of information.”
“Over the course of five weeks I gradually went from using the walker, to crutches, to one crutch, to using a cane,” she said. “And after five weeks I could walk unassisted.” After 12 weeks she returned to work full-time. “Every day I talk to patients about my own experience, and I tell them how much better they’re going to feel,” she said. Individual results may vary. Consult your physician for complete information regarding this product.
* indicates a required field
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||