When I was a kid, I seemed to always notice guys with a nubby finger, missing finger, etc... I specifically recall the first one. Our neighbor was an engineer at Bendix. He was always building stuff in his garage. My dad and he were good friends, so we'd mosey down there to see what he was working on. As they were talking, I noticed one of his index fingers was missing the first joint. Being a small kid, of course I blurted out "What happened to your finger?" as soon as I saw it, right in the middle of their conversation.I work in public right of ways and cross many yards each day. This results in many conversations. When the injured finger comes up I have been surprised how many other men are missing fingers/finger tips various other hand injuries.
Ouch!
Physical therapy has always been a great thing for me until this back injury diagnosis. Has always resolved any problems. Foot, back, legs, finger, rotator cuff, etc... but I had pain in both hips and legs, exactly the same. I knew it was back. Insurance made me get an X-ray first, which didn't show the problem, then go to all kinds of physical therapy before they'd authorize an MRI. Therapy didn't do anything. I knew it was my spine. MRI confirmed. Surgery was 10 months and two deductibles from the 1st doctor visit. Grrr....Those darn middle fingers are just too long, so I shortened my left one at work one day. A dozen years later my kid did the exact same thing.
My Dr. suggested I go to physical therapy. I thought he was joking so I said no, and had a tender spot for years.
My kid went to physical therapy and ~ 3 months later was pain free.
Grrr.... is right. Sometimes the "simple things first" for a fix is not the best advise.Physical therapy has always been a great thing for me until this back injury diagnosis. Has always resolved any problems. Foot, back, legs, finger, rotator cuff, etc... but I had pain in both hips and legs, exactly the same. I knew it was back. Insurance made me get an X-ray first, which didn't show the problem, then go to all kinds of physical therapy before they'd authorize an MRI. Therapy didn't do anything. I knew it was my spine. MRI confirmed. Surgery was 10 months and two deductibles from the 1st doctor visit. Grrr....![]()
Interesting thing was when they finally authorized my MRI in November, I had a choice to go over the results with the LPN that week, or wait until January to see the surgeon. I chose LPN. She looked over the MRI with me and scheduled me an appointment with the Surgeon the next week.Grrr.... is right. Sometimes the "simple things first" for a fix is not the best advise.
A podiatrist told me he was 90% sure I had Capsulitis of the second toe. He was wrong.