Great to hear that Ed. I have a pending hip replacement that I hope to complete before the end of the year hopefully. Had one knee done many years ago and know how painful the rehab was for that.
Sorry to complicate the thread.
Dave
On Thu, 29 May 2025, 00:20 Kurt Wendt, kurthwendt@gmail.com wrote:
WOW -- Ed - that's SO COOL To hear! YEah - I did a walk down into Grand Canyon many years ago - when I was a bit more of a Young Whipper Snapper!!!
-K
On Wed, May 28, 2025 at 6:52 PM Ed Leafe ed@leafe.com wrote:
On May 28, 2025, at 15:04, Bill Anderson billand88@gmail.com wrote:
Sorry for the late notice, had a total knee replacement done two days
after
the release...
I had my left knee done in 2019, and last year it started to fail, so I had it re-done last November. One thing I learned is that all the pain
from
rehabbing the joint is WORTH IT! The failure was from the cement used to hold the joint in the bone, and not anything I did. Until it failed, it worked great, and I credit the physical therapy for that. As my surgeon said, expect six weeks of hell!
This time around it was better because the doc recommended "pre-hab" before the surgery. I had lost a lot of flexion in the joint because of
the
failure, and they worked to increase that as much as possible
beforehand. I
didn't understand why at first, thinking that we were just going to get
rid
of that old joint anyway, but it's needed to stretch the tendons, ligaments, and other assorted parts so that they have a head start on
where
they need to be post-surgery.
Last month my wife and I did a road trip through the American southwest, and that included a stop at the Grand Canyon. We hiked the first 1.5
miles
of the Bright Angel trail, which might not sound like much, but that is
an
elevation change of 1,200 ft (around 360 meters), which is equivalent to walking the stairs on a 120-story building. While my lungs were working hard to keep up, the knee was no problem!
-- Ed Leafe
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