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Posted on Apr 13, 2017, 6:40 pm
#1

I've been informed some patients got nerve damage after surgery (numbness, extreme pain, reduced mobility, spasmodic movements). Wonder if this could be prevented by a good surgical ability because they asked me for legal advice

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Posted on Apr 13, 2017, 7:06 pm
#2

Where those patients completely done with LL (5+ years) or recovering ones? Nerves take a long time to heal. I doubt theres a good surgical technique that completely rids of nerve damage. They should've known what their getting into anyway

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Posted on Apr 13, 2017, 7:09 pm
#3

Quote from: 0184946 on April 13, 2017, 07:06:30 PMWhere those patients completely done with LL (5+ years) or recovering ones? Nerves take a long time to heal. I doubt theres a good surgical technique that completely rids of nerve damage. They should've known what their getting into anyway


Don't feed the troll, please.

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Posted on Apr 13, 2017, 7:20 pm
#4

Not +5 years. The oldest one had surgery 2 years ago.

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Posted on Apr 14, 2017, 7:28 am
#5

Highly unlikely that a good surgeon cuts nerve during the implant insertion, plus the patient would know that right after surgery. don't you think?
More likely that nerve damage happened from too fast distraction.
The fear of nerve damage was the main reason I slowed down to 0.7 mm distraction per day, just to be on the save side.

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Posted on Apr 15, 2017, 8:35 pm
#6

Some patients got numbness in OR after surgery because they nerves were damaged. They still have numbness problems after years. Other patients had numbness when distracting. Those reported their numbness went away

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