What is it with broken toes?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
LongShortLong
Oops, did I write distal? My break is the proximal phalanx bone, adjacent to meta-tarsal (aka arch). The break is near the distal end of that bone. I also wondered about the size of the bones and how well a surgeon could align small slippery things. And whether it would be aligned just as well externally. Though a pin would give me much confidence it would stay aligned while healing.
Do you see ORIFs of proximal #2 with no joint involvement?
Attachment 495693
The other two images did not show misalignment according to doc 2, but who knows how it's moved since then. After buddying to the big toe, it had 20 degrees or so bend (via eyeball). I buddied to toe#3, and it looks straight to me now (no pain, no force to realign). No idea how it looks now in other image planes. In my experience adjusting it the first day, it only moved in the one plane, though I felt it would move elsewise if I tried. First time I thought maybe it was just dislocated, but alas it's broken.
There doesn't seem to be much pain. Maybe my back pain dominates it, though I think it's not much pain. Occasionally there is some dull pain or burning sensation.
My bad, you did say proximal. However that’s a really small piece of bone on the X-ray and you probably fuck it up more trying to pin it or open it and put screws in. If you have surgery the recovery would likely be the same as conservative treatment. You’re going to be in a cast boot or post op shoe with non weight bearing. It’s in the joint so I would bet it’s going to wind up stiff either way. Phalanges, fingers or toes rarely heal without stiffness if the joint is involved. I would try conservative treatment if it was me but everyone needs to decide about surgery on their own.
I was mostly responding to rod’s claim that there’s no downside to surgery.
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What is it with broken toes?
Did they rec PT once you can get out of the shoe and flex the foot? I broke pinky several years ago. 10 wks with foot immobilized. Once for the thumbs up to begin regular activity, the doc didn’t mention pt. I went about regular athletic and life stuff. Come winter, I started having upstream problems (knee). Saw a physiatrist who dx’ed issues from leg atrophy from the immobilization 9 months prior. It was visually noticeable once pointed out to me. PT set me straight.