Log splitter injury (no pics)

   / Log splitter injury (no pics) #51  
s219 "op", Yeah, it's looking good. With mine, the squished tip actually affected the joints back into my hand even though they were not injured. It took a good year to work all that stiffness out of the hand....strange. I have been through a couple of Winters now and that finger still gets cold FAST. If I'm out in real cold weather, the mitten ALWAYS goes on. Even mid 30's temps still get it all puffed up and frozen. (Keep your eye out for a good pair of mittens) Good luck and keep us posted.
 
   / Log splitter injury (no pics) #52  
As best I can recall, when I chopped mostly through my left index fingertip and nail with a cane cutter/machete it was about 6/2009 [please don't ask what I was thinking], but I missed [or at least didn't disrupt] the bone, and I can still use that finger to grab really hot bowls and plates without pain, but I think that most of the light touch sensation was back by about 2013 or so, and it hasn't really improved to speak of since then.
Ha! I also have a finger that was cut to the bone when I was shearing x-mas trees. It wasn't the tip but 1 joint further back on my pointer finger. It is still sort of numb but it took 20 years to get as good as it will get.
 
   / Log splitter injury (no pics) #53  
Ha! I also have a finger that was cut to the bone when I was shearing x-mas trees. It wasn't the tip but 1 joint further back on my pointer finger. It is still sort of numb but it took 20 years to get as good as it will get.

Ha, backatcha,

I bet it's still mortal cold in winter too, if it's at all like mine.

I neglected to say that about 5 or 6 years before that, I was re-wiring a suicide cable for our generator to well pump connection (since replaced with a saner option) DURING an outage, & tried to amputate the tip of that same finger with a brand new razor knife blade.

You know how you rotate the knife around the wire to cut through the insulation?

Well, somehow the tip of my finger got in there too...

Yup, right through the nail to the bone, but missed the tendon.

That made the machete injury the insult added to the original injury.

The other interesting thing is that for the next 10+ years (after the 2nd laceration), I kept getting a tiny, but really tender nodule at the near end of the healed cut(s) along with early arthritis in the middle joint.

Eventually, when I finally got a dermatologist to take a look at it, he said that when they repaired the cuts, which were really oblique, so that the one edge was too thin to hold sutures, both times, the ER docs had pulled the skin around to get more meat to sew through, and the skin ended up stretched too tightly, causing the near end of the cuts to bunch up making the nodule, and torquing the joint with the end result being the arthritis.

The nodule eventually faded away, but that joint still complains, especially in the cold, and when I make a fist, the fingertip turns in under the middle fingertip.

Still and all, it beats being called Stubby :)

The fingers on my uncle Myron's right hand tapered diagonally from the distal/end joint of his right index finger in a straight line to the middle joint of his pinky finger, as a result of a minor lapse of judgement while cutting up limb wood with an old buzz saw (the kind run off a tractor PTO with a wide canvas belt).

He REALLY used to cuss on cold morrnings-I guess phantom limbs don't like the cold much either...

Sorry to blather on, but now for the non-hijacking thread related content:

Hey S219,

That finger is looking really good, especially for how short a time it has been! (Though, I'm sure it has felt like ages....)

Way to go!

But don't start overdoing just yet- or in the words of Han Solo: "Don't get cocky kid!!"

Thomas
 
Last edited:
   / Log splitter injury (no pics)
  • Thread Starter
#54  
Yeah, I am amazed how fast it is healing -- which for a non-medical person like me is based on how the pain level and swelling has gone down, and how much better it looks. The body is pretty amazing at recovery sometimes.
 
   / Log splitter injury (no pics) #55  
The physical therapist has me doing some exercises every hour to start restoring flexibility and function to my hand (all the fingers have stiffened up and become hard to move).
.

I took a ladder ride 20 years ago and shattered the radial head in my right elbow into 5 or 6 pieces. A couple of surgeries and LOTS of Physical Therapy restored 98% of my functionality in that joint. About 10 years ago I tore a tendon from the upper arm bone in that same arm. Another surgery and a LOT of PT later, I have full functionality. Both times the surgeons were surprised at the extent of my recovery. I attribute it to my being dedicated to the Physical Therapy. It is tiring, painful, and boring, but is necessary for a full recovery.

It worked for me.
 
Last edited:
   / Log splitter injury (no pics) #56  
Hey Old Guy, welcome to TBN from Jackson County!

:welcome:
 
   / Log splitter injury (no pics) #57  
I took a ladder ride 20 years ago and shattered the radial head in my right elbow into 5 or 6 pieces. A couple of surgeries and LOTS of Physical Therapy restored 98% of my functionality in that joint. About 10 years ago I tore a tendon from the upper arm bone in that same arm. Another surgery and a LOT of PT later, I have full functionality. Both times the surgeons were surprised at the extent of my recovery. I attribute it to my being dedicated to the Physical Therapy. It is tiring, painful, and boring, but is necessary for a full recovery.

It worked for me.

2++ on this post- PT is all of the above + essential- AS Is the doing the exercises at home too- the limited time you're there at PT is just to teach you what to do, and make sure that you're doing it right, the actual work gets done at home.

My goal at PT is always to exceed the % of recovery predictions of whoever did the predicting. [For my own benefit- also to protect against future injury.]
 
   / Log splitter injury (no pics) #58  
Sadly, the long term effects can come down to your luck at getting a good doctor at ER. I squashed a finger, cutting off the extreme tip a couple of years ago. I had built an implement with an unforseen pinch hazzard.

The doctor was mindfull of my queesiness, was thoughtfull of his course of action for my fingers future and was an expert. Maybe, most of all, he just really cared. How could a guy get so unlucky with the accident and be lucky enough to get such a doctor?

It was actually the first time, I have ever had freezing administered properly, so I felt no pain with the stitches.

I owe this man a debt of gratitude, and the injury has healed almost, to as good as new!
 
   / Log splitter injury (no pics) #59  
2++ on this post- PT is all of the above + essential- AS Is the doing the exercises at home too- the limited time you're there at PT is just to teach you what to do, and make sure that you're doing it right, the actual work gets done at home.

My goal at PT is always to exceed the % of recovery predictions of whoever did the predicting. [For my own benefit- also to protect against future injury.]

Doctors declared my elbow to have 100% motion restored. I call it just 98% as it does not hyper-extend as far as the other.

Yep. Do the exercises all the time, not just when at PT. I spent a couple of months with an elastic (what PT folks called their big rubber bands) tied to the passenger arm rest in my truck. Did exercise while driving, holding the elastic while rotating arm to my stomach (and back). Would not be as effective for me today, however, as arm would hit my stomach much sooner : - )
 
   / Log splitter injury (no pics) #60  
Doctors declared my elbow to have 100% motion restored. I call it just 98% as it does not hyper-extend as far as the other.

Yep. Do the exercises all the time, not just when at PT. I spent a couple of months with an elastic (what PT folks called their big rubber bands) tied to the passenger arm rest in my truck. Did exercise while driving, holding the elastic while rotating arm to my stomach (and back). Would not be as effective for me today, however, as arm would hit my stomach much sooner : - )

You and me both brother- and the recovery period of enforced inactivity didn't help with that much either.

Hard to be forced to sit around and not eat more- especially given all those food related shows on the idiot box.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2023 KAWASAKI MULE (A51243)
2023 KAWASAKI MULE...
UNUSED CFG Industrial QK16R Mini Excavator (A47384)
UNUSED CFG...
2013 Ford F-550 4x4 Ext. Cab Auto Crane 6406H 6,000LB Crane Service Truck (A50323)
2013 Ford F-550...
Complete Unloading Auger and Power Sweep (A50515)
Complete Unloading...
UNUSED PALADIN SKID STEER HYDRAULIC BREAKING HAMMER (A51243)
UNUSED PALADIN...
2008 CATERPILLAR 140M VHP MOTORGRADER (A51242)
2008 CATERPILLAR...
 
Top