A couple of weeks ago, I sustained a knee injury which was a freak occurrence, random happenstance, and still, a very confusing injury to me. I am well aware of proper body mechanics and posture, and was practicing them to the best of my ability when this occurred (I know this because there were three students in the room - one helping me with the patient's legs - and I made a mental note to demonstrate proper lifting technique).
I was performing a two-man lift moving a patient from wheelchair to stretcher (or gurney as I learned on the left coast), lifted the patient off the chair, placed his hips on the stretcher, and while I was lowering his shoulders onto the stretcher, felt a "pop" in my knee accompanied by instant pain and an inability to bear weight. I thought for sure I had torn a ligament, and thankfully, this occurred after the patient was safely on the gurney.
I had an initial set of x-rays that day that showed lateral joint effusion (my opinion) which the doctor called normal. After protesting and noting a few other discrepancies, I decided to obtain a second opinion at the local Emergency Room the following morning. A second set of x-rays showed no fracture that I could see, or that the Radiologist's report could identify. Still, I was referred to an orthopedic surgeon for a follow-up visit. We did the range-of-motion tests, which were accomplished easily by the time I got in to see her as it was healing nicely I thought. And then she pushed down on the lateral part of my knee right at the joint, and I felt like I was going to pass out it hurt so bad. Needless to say, an MRI was ordered "just in case."
So I had my MRI yesterday, and showed my films to a Radiologist that I work with... it seems I have a tibial plateau fracture, nondisplaced, but rather large that didn't show up on the x-rays at all. He said it was definitely there, but the angle of the fracture made it appear to be a part of the cortex on the tibial plateau. I found myself looking at the x-rays in vain trying to see the original fracture, and I've been walking on it pain-free for about a week now.
What I've learned:
I already knew that some fractures might not be seen on plain films, but now have first-hand credibility to that claim.
Also, no matter how good your body mechanics and posture are, we still perform a job with lots of lifting that wears on your body over time. I wonder how bad my injuries could have been without proper body mechanics?
Finally, document everything - and document well. Seek second opinions if necessary and write as much detail as possible, not only for yourself, but for patients that you encounter when you are performing your daily examinations. You never know how much it will help them.
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Ouch! I'm glad they were able to determine the problem. I'm assuming the injury WAS well documented so you haven't missed much $$ from being out of work...
ReplyDeleteJust wanted to tell you your surgery guide came in handy today as it was my first day in the OR at my new job. I hadn't been down to surgery in about 3 months due to working at a clinic, and then a hospital that chose not to orient me to the OR for some reason...
I was a bit rusty but recalled your post before I went to work today because I knew I'd be in the OR. The 4 I went in to all went smoothly :)
Hope you're back 100% soon!
Ouch! I'm glad they were able to determine the problem. I'm assuming the injury WAS well documented so you haven't missed much $$ from being out of work...
ReplyDeleteJust wanted to tell you your surgery guide came in handy today as it was my first day in the OR at my new job. I hadn't been down to surgery in about 3 months due to working at a clinic, and then a hospital that chose not to orient me to the OR for some reason...
I was a bit rusty but recalled your post before I went to work today because I knew I'd be in the OR. The 4 I went in to all went smoothly :)
Hope you're back 100% soon!
What's halarious about this injury is that it doesn't hurt at all... I've been working without any idea of the severity. I almost went jogging the day of my MRI but thought "hmmmm... I should probably wait until I get the results."
ReplyDeleteI'm glad the quick-reference helped out. Congrats on obtaining employment. Our grads out here are having to compete quite a bit for jobs. I wish we could find everyone employment!
What's halarious about this injury is that it doesn't hurt at all... I've been working without any idea of the severity. I almost went jogging the day of my MRI but thought "hmmmm... I should probably wait until I get the results."
ReplyDeleteI'm glad the quick-reference helped out. Congrats on obtaining employment. Our grads out here are having to compete quite a bit for jobs. I wish we could find everyone employment!
It took me a few months...I graduated in March then worked at my clinical site for a month full time like any new hire would get, then at another hospital in system for about 6 weeks. I found a temp. job at a clinic which I'm still doing 2 days a week...
ReplyDeleteI finally found a full time job at a hospital close by, and had 3 good references so it worked out (plus it's the same group of radiologists and they like me, or atleast pretend too :)
Well I hope you are able to take it easy enough to let your knee fully heal--don't push it!
It took me a few months...I graduated in March then worked at my clinical site for a month full time like any new hire would get, then at another hospital in system for about 6 weeks. I found a temp. job at a clinic which I'm still doing 2 days a week...
ReplyDeleteI finally found a full time job at a hospital close by, and had 3 good references so it worked out (plus it's the same group of radiologists and they like me, or atleast pretend too :)
Well I hope you are able to take it easy enough to let your knee fully heal--don't push it!
Accidents can happen anywhere and anytime. I remember a lot of freak accidents on my younger years and one even caused me a surgery for my knee cap when I was in college - I slipped because my elephant pants tripped me.
ReplyDelete