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Not all doctors are created equal.In March of 2020, I injured my shoulder. I got a surgery immediately after in it. However I had lost functionality in some of the muscles in my shoulder. For everyday activities this was not a big deal because you can compensate. But any athletic endeavour now became a challenge of "can I still do this?"Over the next year and a half, I saw 5 doctors and 2 neurologists. The all told me my shoulder would get better "in the next month"(it didn't), or that it would never get better and I'd have to live with it.Then last month, on the behest of @nck237 and suggestion of @tteddles, I went to the Steadman Clinic up in Vail to see Dr.Millet. Within 3 minutes of seeing my charts, he said he could perform a surgery that would almost certainly help my situation. On Wednesday I had said surgery, and now I will excersie patience over the next few months to see if it worked.It's been a hard year for me, as it has for everyone. Cancelled plans to travel for a year, the pandemic, but most of all this injury.It's caused a mental shift from "anything is possible" to "this is as good as it gets". It's been hard. Every time I try to push myself I wonder, "is my injury holding me back?". I've written some learnings on my journey with this injury in the blog that linked in my bio. I hope you find it useful if you ever receive an injury and need to navigate the medical world in search of solutions.Lastly I'd like to thank some people. @nck237for being their during my whole surgery journey and bringing me delicious food in the hospital. @tteddles for her initial recommendation to go see a doctor in Vail over a year ago. I never let go of that idea and glad I finally went for it. @djdicato for always being a good friend and watching Nicole's dogs so she could take care of me in Vail. Steven the night nurse for taking care of me and putting up with my 2am walks around the ward. And of course to Dr.Millet for having a solution when no other doctor did.
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Shoulder surgery: part 2, lessons learned

Not all doctors are created equal.

In March of 2020, I injured my shoulder snowboarding. Shortly after, I received surgery on the shoulder assuming that surgery would fix any issues I was having. Shortly after that, I discovered I had lost control of some of the muscles in my shoulder. My initial doctor had missed this.

Over the next year and a half, I saw 5 doctors and 2 neurologists. They all told me things from “your shoulder will get better in a month, be patient”(it did not get better) to “there’s nothing we can do about it, just live with it”.

Then on the behest of @teddy and @nicole, last month I reached out to Dr.Millet at the Steadman Clinic in vail. Dr.Millet has published over 400 papers in arthroscopic shoulder surgery, has held faculty postions at Harvard Medical School, and was rated in the top 1% of orthopedic doctors in the country.

Within 3 minutes of looking at my charts, Dr.Millet told me that he could improve my condition via surgery “with 90-95% certainty” and “75% chance to getting back to normal function”. I was scheduled for surgery for 2 weeks later. Last wednesday I had that surgery.

I still have a recovery to go through and to remains to be seen if/how much funtion I get back. But I wanted to use this post to share some of my learnings I’ve had along the journey of this injury, in hopes that someone else will find it helpful when they get injured:

1. SEE MULTIPLE DOCTORS. Not all doctors have the same training. Some are not great doctors(after all, C’s get degrees). I saw 5 different doctors and 2 nuerologists, AND THEY ALL TOLD ME DIFFERENT THINGS. Some doctors CONTRIDICTED others. One doctor straight up said, “I disagree with this other doctor’s assessment”. Another doctor said, “this report is so bad this doctor should go back to school”. Sport medicine doctors for example will look at you through the lens of an athele who is willing to do what it takes to get full function back, vs other doctors who will only look at you to make sure you can perform daily tasks again. You also need to see multiple doctors to get the full picture of your injury. As you see each doctor, you will get slightly different information about surgeries and possible causes of symptoms. With each visit you can begin to piece together all your options.
2. Advocate for yourself. Doctors will only do what you ask them to. If you don’t say anythings wrong, even if something is clearly wrong, they won’t do anything about it. They also might wrongly assume what issue you are having if you aren’t specific about it. For me, there’s a very clear shoulder deformity. But that’s what I was concerned about. So don’t say “What can you do about my shoulder?” Say, “I want to gain functionality back in external rotation, what can you do about that?”.
3. Understand your injury, ask intelligent questions, and CHALLENGE YOUR DOCTORS DIAGNOSIS. Have your doctor explain to you the mechancis of your injury. Ask them to use proper terminology, so you can later go and research about your injury online. You’re not a medical professional, but a medical professional should be able to explain your injury to you in terms you understand(the internet can as well). If the doctor can’t, then you can’t truly make an informed decision about what to do. Go find another doctor who can explain things in a way you understand. Once you begin to understand your injury, ask intelligent questions. Dont ask, “what’s wrong with my shoulder?”, ask, “what’s wrong with my suprascapular nerve that it’s preventing me from externally rotating my arm?”. When it comes to challenging your doctor, don’t say, “why do you suggest this surgery?”, ask, “why are you suggesting to performing a superscapular nerve release when most doctors will only perform this when there is entrapment via cyst?”. Challenging the doctor in this way will lead you to understand a doctor’s ability level, understand their training, and most important understand where their shortcomings are and whether you should get a second opinion about something. Use your intuition in this case: you might not fully understand the problem space the doctor is working in, but if you challenge them, they should be able to provide you with an answer that makes sense. Your intuition can then tell you when their answer is bullshit or not totally informed.
4. Know when to run, and when to walk. Some injuries need immediate attention, and the clock is ticking. Other injuries can wait and you can spend more time gathering information and weighing your options. For me, my initial shoulder surgery in march of 2020 could have waited. In fact if I had gathered more info, I wouldn’t have gotten the surgery at all. The surgery I got last week I should have gotten a year ago to lessen my nerve deterioration and permanent damage.

I hope this post was informative, and can help you if you ever find yourself in a position where you need to make medical decisions about your body, wether it’s injury or something else.

Injuries are hard, and the medical world is not flawless. It’s flawed just like every other aspect of life. So use your wits and knowledge and problem solving to try and navigate it so you can have a good outcome.

Some photos of the surgery/hospital stay are below:

Before nausea medicine
After nausea medicine
5 incisions
Steven, my overnight nurse!
Dr.Millet, the man, the legend.
swoll(en)
Thanks to @nicole for bringing me delicious food

 

 

I give the North ridge of spearhead 2 thumbs up .8ish pitches of 4th class to 5.6, 10 miles and 3k feet, with 13 hours moving time. W/ Richard.Absolutely amazing views. There's endless climbing/skiing/ice climbing routes in this area. I'm definitely coming back.

I give the North ridge of spearhead 2 thumbs up .8ish pitches of 4th class to 5.6, 10 miles and 3k feet, with 13 hours moving time. W/ Richard.Absolutely amazing views. There's endless climbing/skiing/ice climbing routes in this area. I'm definitely coming back.