Actually a wound vac worked extremely well for me.  I was pleasantly shocked
how quickly I fully healed.  ALTHOUGH, the wound was on my stomach
(therefore, no daily pressure).

Mike~ 

 

Please check out my paintings at:

      www.MurGallery.com

 

-----Original Message-----
From: John S. [mailto:alcibiat...@yahoo.com] 
Sent: Sunday, August 30, 2009 4:40 PM
To: quad-list@eskimo.com
Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] pressure wound....need help

 

In responce to the sore; I strongly feel every quad should be on a low air
loss mattress. Four unversities have tested them and concluded that it is
the only proactive surface for healing and preventing sores. Call Hill-Rom
and ask if they have a nurse in your area. The trick to getting the mattress
seems to be in the paperwork.  I had a stage 4 wound that healed up in 2
months and I still got in the chair 1 out of three days. There are no
pressure points on a low air loss mattress and the constant air keeps the
wound dryer but not too dry. Your bodies natural bacteria can work faster to
heal the wounds. If your wound is filled with necrotic tissue, maggots can
clean it out faster and more effectivly than any other debrieding action.
When the wound is clean it will heal without involving a doctor. 

My nurse would put some Amish super honey in the wound when it needed it.
(it has a name but I cannot remember it to save my life) It is called Royal
Jelly. 

I have been getting bee stings for my knees hips and spine for about 3
months. I don't feel it but it costs $5 for 10 stings and I buy honey when I
go. When my skin starts to get red areas I have my aid rub honey onto it
gently until it is absorbed. Mollasses (sp) is suppose to work, as is
processed sugar. The idea is it grows good bacteria faster by bringing
oxygen and nutrients into the wound  

We all have osteo-arthritis. Our bones are chalk-like and cartilage is a
joke. New quads should take Glucosamine-condroitin tablets from the
begining.  
The trick to healing a wound quickly is to get rid of the dead tissue
without destroying the good bacteria. Never let anyone use Hydrogen Peroxide
or anti-bacterial cream or ointment. These products kill the good bacteria
with the bad and in most cases the bad bacteria will get back in the wound
and set you back months. 

Nurses, Doctors, and aids often carry bacteria from one patient to the next.
Do not feel bad about asking them to wash their hands and use sterile gloves
to examine your wound.

If I was using the wound vac, I am sure I would want royal jelly in the
wound to add oxygen and proteins needed for healing. The idea that a wound
will heal fast in an occlusive environment does not make much sense when we
have all seen cuts heal fast when left open and no pressure, such as graph
sites on top of thighs. Those heal very fast with a mere piece of gause to
promote a scab. Royal Jelly helps speed healing and reduce scars. Wound vacs
seem to be counter to what we know about healing. If a wound is producing a
lot of puss and drainage maybe the bad bacteria and dead tissue have not
been cleaned out.

Take probiotics now. These also help wounds heal faster. 

If you think I'm wrong then simply don't do any of these tips. My stage 4
wound healed in 8 weeks and I still got in my chair every 3rd day. Now I am
under the radar to keep my low air loss mattress. 

I know many of you will get flaps and the doctors will buy new hottubs with
the money they make on it. 

If you take large doses of probiotics and clean your wounds gently and use
Royal Jelly you should see improvment in days. You can use the vac but I
think it will heal faster if you simply minimize pressure on it. I
appologize for rambing but I had a wound specialist that turned my stage 2
wound into a stage 4 and wanted to do flap surgery. I had to return to my GP
to get the low air loss mattress. He has only seen pictures of the wound as
it healed. When your wound doctor says those mattresses are expensive, ask
how much he makes for the visits and surgery? 

If your life is centered on healing your sores then what do you rank your
quality of life at? I've been to two wound doctors and both were like going
back in time. The same treatments as they have used since WW2. They can use
stem cells now. Why don't they talk about it? Do you think a person that
wasn't handicapped would consider what you are going through as acceptable
treatment? We are treated as though we are all the same. I have talked to
quads that have spent over a year in bed. I cannot do that. I don't have a
great life but what I have requires me to go out of this place. 

I wish you a speedy healing process no matter what you choose to do. 

 Sorry if I ran on too much,

 

john

 

  _____  

From: Steve Crowder <dangerwo...@san.rr.com>
To: Paul Jacobson <pjacob...@san.rr.com>; Lori Michaelson
<lorilivin...@gmail.com>; quad-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Sunday, August 30, 2009 12:41:55 AM
Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] pressure wound....need help

Hello Paul. I'm on the vac right now. I really don't know much about it, but
I'll try to explain it. The purpose of it is to suck out all the blood and
debris and nasty stuff and keep it healthy and clean and open. It is
supposed to be very good for promoting healing and prepare you for
eventually doing a flap, which somehow allows the wound to heal. I really
don't know much about it. It's all the way over my head. I'm told this is
the third and final attempt at getting one to work on in the same difficult
spot. I'm prepared to do whatever I must within my abilities, otherwise I'm
a goner.

 

As for the Clinitron, it is just what you said -- an alternating pressure

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Paul Jacobson <mailto:pjacob...@san.rr.com>  

To: Lori Michaelson <mailto:lorilivin...@gmail.com>  ; quad-list@eskimo.com 

Sent: Monday, August 24, 2009 12:33 PM

Subject: [QUAD-L] pressure wound....need help

 

HI THERE.......I have a Stage 3 wound on the back of my

leg.  So no w/c.....just bed to keep pressure off.  Has 

anyone used a wound-vac?  Results?

 

How about flap surgery?  Also need to get a Clinitron 

alternating pressure bed....anyone ever use one?

 

THANK YOU FOR YOUR HELP!

Paul c5/6

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Lori Michaelson <mailto:lorilivin...@gmail.com>  

To: quad-list@eskimo.com 

Sent: Monday, August 24, 2009 11:56 AM

Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] Syrinx

 

I agree totally with Tod below.  And, even though I am not male, my symptoms
began with lower abdominal PAIN whereby I could hardly think.  SYRINGOMYELIA
sux big time.

 

Lori

On Mon, Aug 24, 2009 at 10:44 AM, Tod E. Santee <sant...@cox.net> wrote:

Ron & David (mrpockets_2000):
... I *do* know very few neurosurgeons will will work on a high-cord syrinx
solely because of pain.  If loss of function begins and continues, that's a
bit different.  There are just far too many risks for doing cervical cord
surgery just because of pain.  They'd prefer narcotics and high pain
tolerance.

Lower thoracic and lumbar syrinxs are more likely to be treated surgically
if pain is the issue... but still mostly as a last resort.  Beware the doc
who suggests surgery before anything else is tried!!

David... as for the pain in the groin area.. OUCH!  I know!  I get it pretty
bad, too, even though I've had the syrinx / cord-untethering surgery.  I've
explained it more like riding a seatless bike, sitting on just the seat
post, while hitting several speed bumps.  Does that sound like a familiar
feeling?

Man -- If ANYONE ever comes up with a cure, drug or treatment for that...
sign me up!


Best to All!
--Tod



---- RONALD L PRACHT <r.pra...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
> with a syrinx at c1 c2 neuros wont operate unless things get really bad,
like function loss. the key is never operate above your level of injury. the
syrinx can cause pain in abdomen and back , because yours is higher the neck
area is probally affected. depnding on where you are in the states i would
see out a specialist to give you an opinion.
>  
> ron c7
>
> --- On Sun, 8/23/09, David <mrpockets_2...@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>
> From: David <mrpockets_2...@yahoo.com>
> Subject: [QUAD-L] Syrinx
> To: quad-list@eskimo.com
> Date: Sunday, August 23, 2009, 9:42 PM
>
>
>
>
>
> I've had a syrinx located at C1/C2 and because the doctors say that there
> is a pretty good chance of me ending up on a vent, I have elected to avoid
> surgery at this time.
>
> For those of you males who might have a syrinx, do you experience a lot if
> neuro-pathic pain between your shoulder blades and especially in the groin
area.  I feel lie there is someone pushing on my groin.  Every time I go to
push my manual wheelchair iI feel like my bladder is going to lose control
because of the pressure on it.  And there are times that my body feels lie
it burning from the inside out.
>
>
> David B.
>
>






-- 
Lori 
Age - 45
C4/5 complete quad, nearly 30 years post
Tucson, AZ

 

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