On legs, Hugos, and maybe other sundry stuff.

Apr 22, 2015 00:28

Since last I posted about my leg, I've been to see the doctor. He basically checked out that the swelling and redness seem to have gone down, gave me some more context on the fluid pocket in my calf, added a potassium supplement to my prescription regimen, and told me to come back in a week, at which point he might renew the antibiotics if they ( Read more... )

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acelightning April 22 2015, 09:36:23 UTC
I'm more than a bit puzzled by the apparent attitude of your doctors. They don't know what the thing in the back of your knee actually is/was, but they don't seem to be particularly interested in finding that out. I would think they'd do everything in their power to figure it out, to determine how urgently it needed attention, and what kind(s) of attention. Instead, they're throwing industrial-strength antibiotics at it, sort of blindfolded. (A burst Baker's cyst isn't even an infection; NSAIDs and/or corticosteroids would be more to the point.)

IANAD, yadda yadda, but if I were in your position, I'd argue with them :-(

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blaisepascal April 22 2015, 11:12:51 UTC
The ER doctor/PA was looking at my leg in ways I couldn't (i can't look at the back of my leg) . When I turned face-down on the ER bed and exposed both my calves for comparison purposes, starsplattter exclaimed "Oh my god" at the apparently very visible and bad inflammation/infection process going on ( ... )

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acelightning April 23 2015, 10:28:52 UTC
*sigh* That's why I included the usual disclaimer ("IANAD")...

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sheherazahde April 22 2015, 18:12:06 UTC
Not everything is known or even knowable. They have determined that it isn't cancer, and the list of things it could be don't require immediate action. Wait and see is the best course of action right now. If it gets worse they might have to take other actions. But it might just go away. A surprising number of things do.

I have a bunch of ganglion cysts on my finger. I find them annoying but unless they start hurting or interfering with my finger's movement my insurance won't pay to have them removed. A pocket of fluid where it shouldn't be is not a medical emergency.

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blaisepascal April 22 2015, 18:17:55 UTC
Well, technically they have not ruled out cancer yet, but it isn't acting like a tumor so it is not a high priority assessment. If it starts doing something unusual (I swear to ghod it sings and dances, just not when anyone is looking at it!) they will be more concerned.

So, yeah, what you said.

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acelightning April 23 2015, 10:32:35 UTC
A pocket of fluid where it shouldn't be may not be a medical emergency, but what caused that fluid to accumulate where it shouldn't could be an emergency. The cheap meat suit just loves to play tricks on its owner :-(

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