My husband has a 1" lift inside of his shoe that was made especially for him
due to the same problem..one leg shorter than the other.  The orthotic is
removable so he can put it in whatever shoe he wears. The one that is
shorter is the one that has been effected by the spinal cord injury.

 

  _____  

From: L T CHERPESKI [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 18, 2011 12:20 AM
To: [email protected]; Janice Nichols
Subject: Re: [TMIC] TM

 

Janice, 

 

I'm not sure if I wrote about it, but when I started another round of
physical therapy several months ago, the therapist found that my left leg
was one inch shorter than the right.  And that really doesn't surprise me
when I think about "walking/wobbling" with a cane for years.  Our gait is
slightly "off"  The therapist worked on me from top of my neck to my toes
for almost 2 hours, which didn't feel very good, but did I ever feel like a
new person when she was done and I stood up!!

 

Good luck, hope it all goes well and you find the relief you're looking for.

 

Linda C (Eagle, ID)

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

From: Janice Nichols <mailto:[email protected]>  

To: [email protected] 

Sent: Monday, January 17, 2011 9:14 PM

Subject: [TMIC] TM

 

Dear Friends,

 

Some months ago, one of you wrote in asking if anyone had a problem with
maybe 1 leg being shorter than the other since having TM.    At the time, I
had not heard

of that being a possibility.       I now know what whoever was talking
about.    My legs are still the same length and my spine is straight, but I
am walking now as though

one leg is slightly longer than the other.     It is caused by the myelitis
and they tell me with therapy, they can fix it  -  I hope.            So, to
whoever wrote in asking about

that, I hope they got help for it.    Something happens in the upper back
hip area.     Anyway, I am working on fixing this and hope no one else has
this problem.  

 

Janice

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