Yeah, I know, see a doctor. I would if it were me, but it's my female counterpart. She-yetis don't like doctors.
So Mrs. Yeti has something wrong with her right leg. She has constant pain (less when seated, worse with each footstep) localized on the shinbone about 2-3" below her kneecap, slightly (few mm) to the lateral/outside of the leading tibial ridge. The area appears swollen (hard, like bone) and is hot to the touch. There is occasionally bruising. Sometimes it feels like a hard piece of bone (chip) may be loose, but this is inconclusive. If I push on the bump with any pressure at all, she experiences severe pain. She's a tough yeti with a high pain tolerance, but she calls moderate pressure on the bump a 7/10. After I blew my knee, I gained a very basic sense of soft tissues around the knee; manipulating her MCL and ACL do not produce pain.
History: she's a 24-year-old female yeti. Yetis are athletic; she was a cross-country runner and basketball player before she got off team sports and into the mountains full-time. Historical injuries include ligament snaps in an ankle and two lower back injuries (crushed discs, so she's been told). She works seasonally in active jobs that require running around the woods and fields chasing children. Onset of injury may have been when she got whacked in the spot by her heavy 9'6" surfboard in August chop, but she isn't sure. We initially thought the bump and pain was a surf bump (calcification due to relentless banging) but it doesn't make sense that she'd have one there, especially since she's not a knee-paddler.
Yetis make decent but not great witch doctors. Googling around, I see that "Osgood-Schlatter Disease" is a painful swelling of the tibial tubercle caused by adolesence (she's not that young) or overuse. Still, this picture appears to depict her pain.
Likewise, this intellihealth web page describes it nearly exactly -- everything's right except her age.
Anyone else know anything about this?
Yeti
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