Bryce,  I take a drink after meals. Most of my protein is from food, but 140 
must have been a mistype. I meant 100 grams per day. My bad. The problems with 
wounds is that they drain protein from your system so fast that it is important 
to replenish your that protein loss but as Lori said, don't overwhelm your 
system. Exess protein exits your system via your kidneys and can be harmful if 
not taken with lots of fluids and spread out over the course of a day. Some of 
the protein drinks can't be digested and will simply be excreted through the 
urinary tract. For many quads, it's important to discuss it with doctors and 
dieticians. After all, we want to be healthy, not cause more problems. Best 
Wishes, John s. 

-------- Original message --------
From: Bryce Willis <[email protected]> 
Date: 08/07/2016  9:45 PM  (GMT-05:00) 
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Fwd: [QUAD-L] Wound FYI 


John, how in the world can you take in 140 grams a day? Larry Willis



Sent from my iPad


Begin forwarded message:





Resent-From: <[email protected]>

From: alcibiates2 <[email protected]>

Date: August 7, 2016 at 1:47:52 PM EDT

To: Lori Michaelson <[email protected]>, William Lang 
<[email protected]>, quad-list <[email protected]>

Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] Wound FYI






I do know the hospital blue boots, but quite frankly, I believe that they have 
saved my boney feet and ankles from many sores over the years. 
In healing sores,  I've found that a high protein diet is essential. A sore 
will drain protein from your system like nothing else.
Don't turn your nose up to those nasty drinks. Just give in and choke it down. 
At least 140 grams per day. 
Best Wishes, 
John s. 




-------- Original message --------

From: Lori Michaelson <[email protected]>


Date: 08/05/2016 5:02 PM (GMT-05:00) 

To: William Lang <[email protected]>, quad-list <[email protected]>


Subject: Re: [QUAD-L] Wound FYI 




Hey William,



I am sorry to hear about your ongoing problems, but this type of thing seems to 
be running rampant this past year, with many of us on this list no matter how 
hard we try for the breakdowns not to happen!



I have never had a Roho cushion as I have always used a rotating air mattress. 
but I posted a couple of weeks ago or a little bit longer what is going on with 
me as a result of a careless nurse ruining my urethra.
 By stretching it. This leads to urine draining around the catheter, which I 
have never had in my life, which gives a Domino effect of skin breakdown -- 
most of which was causing my old battle wounds that I had between 2009 and 
2012, whereby that very fragile
 skin will never get back to as strong as it was.



To add insult to injury, and for the first time in my life a wound opened deep 
in the crease of my groin and for my safety [so any wrong movement or urinary 
bacteria by getting up in my chair] I have been staying
 in bed. It has been a little over 3 weeks now. They are both now closed but 
fragile, so I will wait a few more days to give it a chance to seal a little 
longer for lack of better words.



I DID get up on Tuesday of this week to go see my urologist about the strategy 
of what to do about this urinary leaking and I was going over very smooth roads 
and did not go over any extraordinary bumps or
 anything. And it is only 10 minutes away. But in that time I got an abrasion 
over my right is she'll tuberousity, which is caused by shearing. My Roho 
Cushion has served me well for shearing and that is why I started using one 
beginning in 2010/2011 timeframe.
 So I could get up after my old battle wounds were mostly closed and then 
closed. 



What I have noticed a great correlation to happen is between all the stress I 
have been through over the last six months (because of what happened to me 
around February 1, of having my urethra stretched terribly,
 but of which I did not report at the time, because I did not think it would 
hurt long-term. And there was really no way I could "prove" that one particular 
nurse did it under the circumstances).



Being without any family is what hurts the most and none of this would have 
happened had my sister and brother-in-law been able to keep me living with them 
and they very well could have because they took me
 in for 3 1/2 years after my husband's passing for what I thought would be much 
longer than that . And they had nowhere for me to go because there was no 
accessible houses or apartments in their town or around it. They did not even 
think twice about the consideration
 of putting me in a nursing home I have always been an active person and I was 
getting great care by hiring morning and evening caregivers 7 days a week and I 
had a great home health agency providing me with all nursing needs and 3 
morning home health aide
 visits, which Medicare Certified Home Health Agencies started to cut way back 
on, starting in 1999  thanks to the Clinton administration.



Their reasons for not being able to keep me on more selfish ones in my humble 
opinion. Besides, the three or four other family members lived in the same area 
and they could have kept "sharing the care" outside
 of my morning and evening caregivers. For example, I can feed myself and I was 
eating with them or if they went on vacation and my other sister would come 
down to help me during the day and overnight if I needed anything. My sister 
had to take me to doctors
 appointments, but they were only a few times a year. 



Everything was going great when living with my sister and brother-in-law and 
having other family around, but after they were forcing me to "move on" I had 
to decide what I had to do and do it quickly. Since
 my husband and I had been living in Arizona for 11 years, and whereby it is 
100% accessible, with great weather I moved back to Arizona to find out that no 
home health agency wanted to take me on for whatever excuse they wanted to use 
and since Medicare has
 no teeth and can't force any agency to take down any patient... it has been a 
struggle to say the very least. From Medicare Certified Home Health Agencies 
(the only thing I qualified for) is where I get my catheter changed, my 
supplies ordered and delivered
 and any helpful wound care help from their skilled nursing. And Medicare pays 
for this home help and supplies 100%. They just cut back on home health aide 
care that was great prior to 1999 and switching to the PPS system that was 
providing me with free home
 health aides every morning and every evening 7 days a week. That was also paid 
for by Medicare 100%.



So, what I am trying to say is that you are not alone and that always seems to 
be something. For me it has been people outside my control that have brought on 
all of my problems and my story is unbelievable.



Take care my friend and since we know our bodies best... to have things get out 
of control is very scary to say the very very very least.



~Lori



On Fri, Aug 5, 2016 at 4:04 PM, William Lang 
<[email protected]> wrote:


Hi all,



I have been fighting a number of pressure sores since Nov.  One on my hip 
caused by laying on my right side for 25 years. it is finally closed up. I am a 
Vietnam Air Force vet so I get stuff from the VA for free. They gave me a 
hospital bed,and a ROHO
  mattress. I developed a new sore on my sacrum. It began as a  Sheer wound. It 
was tunneling to the point where it is 2 inches deep and 1 inch wide.



It was caused by the bed! If I did not lift my feet before lifting my head it 
created a sheer. I am currently treating it with Aqua cell which closes the 
wound and Mepilex covering. I also battling wounds on both my ankles and the 
bottom of my left foot.
 They are not so bad. We just keep them covered and wear the dreaded hospital 
blue boots. I am not, thank God, bed ridden. I suppose if the wounds get 
infected down I will go.














Don’t  let what you cannot do interfere with what you can do!     -John Wooden
               
               Billy Lang
      
[email protected]

























-- 




"Petting, scratching and cuddling a dog could be soothing to the mind and heart 
and deep meditation and almost as good for the soul as prayer." ~Dean Koontz








Reply via email to