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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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#1
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Kind of metal related. Getting a new hip (metal) on Thursday. Been bothering me for over 25 years.
Funny about pain. Can come on very sloooowly. You kind of don't feel it but people around you sense it. My doctor convinced me to take a shot in the hip and see if my lifestyle changes. I didn't notice any change, but my SWMBO said I became much more active. Instead of one trip to the shop (100 ft., carrying as much as I can) I made 20-30 trips, thoughtlessly. Also lost 10 lbs. in about 2 weeks time. Shot lasted exactly 4 weeks and then I realized that I had been in pain all along (prior to the shot). Most significantly SWMBO said I was no longer crabby during that period! If any of you have “been there, done that” I would like to hear from you. Thanks, Ivan Vegvary |
#2
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On Tue, 6 Dec 2011 06:24:40 -0800 (PST), Ivan Vegvary
wrote: Kind of metal related. Getting a new hip (metal) on Thursday. Been bothering me for over 25 years. Funny about pain. Can come on very sloooowly. You kind of don't feel it but people around you sense it. My doctor convinced me to take a shot in the hip and see if my lifestyle changes. I didn't notice any change, but my SWMBO said I became much more active. Instead of one trip to the shop (100 ft., carrying as much as I can) I made 20-30 trips, thoughtlessly. Also lost 10 lbs. in about 2 weeks time. Shot lasted exactly 4 weeks and then I realized that I had been in pain all along (prior to the shot). Most significantly SWMBO said I was no longer crabby during that period! If any of you have “been there, done that” I would like to hear from you. I haven't been there, but my neighor 4 doors down is on his 4th and last hip. One leg is 3 inches shorter than the other now and he wears a builtup shoe sole. Needless to say, he's on disability. I can ask him for advice for you if you like, Ivan. I think he's tried both plastics and metal during his 60 years on Earth. -- In reality, serendipity accounts for one percent of the blessings we receive in life, work and love. The other 99 percent is due to our efforts. -- Peter McWilliams |
#3
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![]() "Ivan Vegvary" wrote in message news:11102159.161.1323181480015.JavaMail.geo-discussion-forums@prol32... Kind of metal related. Getting a new hip (metal) on Thursday. Been bothering me for over 25 years. Funny about pain. Can come on very sloooowly. You kind of don't feel it but people around you sense it. My doctor convinced me to take a shot in the hip and see if my lifestyle changes. I didn't notice any change, but my SWMBO said I became much more active. Instead of one trip to the shop (100 ft., carrying as much as I can) I made 20-30 trips, thoughtlessly. Also lost 10 lbs. in about 2 weeks time. Shot lasted exactly 4 weeks and then I realized that I had been in pain all along (prior to the shot). Most significantly SWMBO said I was no longer crabby during that period! If any of you have “been there, done that” I would like to hear from you. Thanks, Ivan Vegvary My comments are mainly on pain. I have to go get evaluated for my left hip. Anything that flexes it outward like sitting crosslegged on the floor makes me feel like someone is twisting it out of the socket. I have a lot of pain from broken back, two shoulder surgeries, knee operations, and lots of hard tumbles and knocks over the years. A life like a professional athlete. Results from extreme hyperbaric exposure. I am in pain management, and taking one of the cutting edge drugs, a new synthetic time release morphine. Other than my hip, my back and neck degeneration are inoperable because there isn't enough good bone to hook to. A good day is a day without pain, and now, it's a good day if I just have a low level. My scale goes to 14 where most people go to 10. It sure is a drag to get something that's progressively worse. It is a long series of adjustments. Stop doing this. Cut back on that. Get physical aids to do things you used to just do. Meds management. I have known several people who have had hips and knees replaced. EVERY one, save one, said it changed their lives, and improved them tremendously. That one got one of those defective ones, and they just changed it. All had relatively easy rehabs, and now can do things they could not before. It's like when I had heart surgery. Three doctors said, "You're going to be amazed at how much better you are going to feel." They were totally right. I speak from my heart surgery experience. You're going to be "uncomfortable" for a week to two, but they give you medicines. Then one day, you will wake up, and say, "Hell, I feel a lot better." From there, it's downhill. Don't reject or ignore the therapy. That's the equivalent break in time, and it really affects how long and how good the thing will last. Good luck. As with heart surgeries, they are as common as appendectomies today. The technology and metal are fully developed. As long as you have no other major health issues, you got a 99.9% rate of survival. Steve www.heartsurgerysurvivalguide.com |
#4
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![]() Good luck. As with heart surgeries, they are as common as appendectomies today. The technology and metal are fully developed. As long as you have no other major health issues, you got a 99.9% rate of survival. Steve www.heartsurgerysurvivalguide.com Sorry to hear about your constant pain. Steve, thanks for the kind words. Ivan Vegvary |
#5
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Ivan Vegvary wrote:
Kind of metal related. Getting a new hip (metal) on Thursday. Been bothering me for over 25 years. Funny about pain. Can come on very sloooowly. You kind of don't feel it but people around you sense it. My doctor convinced me to take a shot in the hip and see if my lifestyle changes. I didn't notice any change, but my SWMBO said I became much more active. Instead of one trip to the shop (100 ft., carrying as much as I can) I made 20-30 trips, thoughtlessly. Also lost 10 lbs. in about 2 weeks time. Shot lasted exactly 4 weeks and then I realized that I had been in pain all along (prior to the shot). Most significantly SWMBO said I was no longer crabby during that period! If any of you have “been there, done that” I would like to hear from you. Thanks, Ivan Vegvary Chronic lower back pain . Some days worse , especially in stormy weather . Mine's probably not as severe as many , but it's *always* there . Most days I take nothing , sometimes a couple of ibuprofen , occasionally it's bad enough for something stronger . And my grandkids call me Grumpaw . -- Snag Learning keeps you young ! |
#6
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On 12/6/2011 6:24 AM, Ivan Vegvary wrote:
Kind of metal related. Getting a new hip (metal) on Thursday. Been bothering me for over 25 years. Funny about pain. Can come on very sloooowly. You kind of don't feel it but people around you sense it. My doctor convinced me to take a shot in the hip and see if my lifestyle changes. I didn't notice any change, but my SWMBO said I became much more active. Instead of one trip to the shop (100 ft., carrying as much as I can) I made 20-30 trips, thoughtlessly. Also lost 10 lbs. in about 2 weeks time. Shot lasted exactly 4 weeks and then I realized that I had been in pain all along (prior to the shot). Most significantly SWMBO said I was no longer crabby during that period! If any of you have “been there, done that” I would like to hear from you. Thanks, Ivan Vegvary Sorry to hear of your problem. I haven't gone there, but have friends and relatives that have. If you're diabetic, expect a long recovery. Hope not. If the replacement is titanium, then it's probably cast right here in Redmond, Oregon. We have a new circuit board customer that is engineering devices to automate the manufacture of replacement components based on 3D x-ray scans of the original and the socket it fits. Paul |
#7
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Ivan Vegvary formulated on Wednesday :
Kind of metal related. Getting a new hip (metal) on Thursday. Been bothering me for over 25 years. Funny about pain. Can come on very sloooowly. You kind of don't feel it but people around you sense it. My doctor convinced me to take a shot in the hip and see if my lifestyle changes. I didn't notice any change, but my SWMBO said I became much more active. Instead of one trip to the shop (100 ft., carrying as much as I can) I made 20-30 trips, thoughtlessly. Also lost 10 lbs. in about 2 weeks time. Shot lasted exactly 4 weeks and then I realized that I had been in pain all along (prior to the shot). Most significantly SWMBO said I was no longer crabby during that period! If any of you have €śbeen there, done that€ť I would like to hear from you. Thanks, Ivan Vegvary After a lot of pain I had my left hip replaced in 1988 and the right one in 1992. Yes 20 years ago. They are both still going fine with no pain after the first week or so. And yes I am 77 now. I believe the originals were damaged in a car accident but no doctor would admit it at the time. -- John G. |
#8
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On Dec 6, 7:24*am, Ivan Vegvary wrote:
Kind of metal related. *Getting a new hip (metal) on Thursday. *Been bothering me for over 25 years. Funny about pain. Can come on very sloooowly. *You kind of don't feel it but people around you sense it. *My doctor convinced me to take a shot in the hip and see if my lifestyle changes. *I didn't notice any change, but my SWMBO said I became much more active. *Instead of one trip to the shop (100 ft., carrying as much as I can) I made 20-30 trips, thoughtlessly.. *Also lost 10 lbs. in about 2 weeks time. *Shot lasted exactly 4 weeks and then I realized that I had been in pain all along (prior to the shot).. Most significantly SWMBO said I was no longer crabby during that period! If any of you have “been there, done that” I would like to hear from you. Thanks, Ivan Vegvary Went through two of these a couple of years ago 6 months apart, left one was worst and first. Used "cobalt-chrome" implants, fancy phrase for Stellite, said it would last 20+ years. Both hips were out of the sockets, grinding on the pelvic bone, no cartilage left. Had put up with that for years. Doc saw the X-rays, said, "when do you want the surgery?". Had to do a heart bypass first, found that problem with the pre-op checkout for the hips, so had to wait a year after that. Would be in a wheelchair or the ground if I hadn't had everything taken care of. First one took about 7 hours. DO WHAT THE PT PERSON SAYS!!! If you don't, you won't have full joint movement. Do the exercises, no matter how it hurts. Had me up on my feet the day after, didn't feel so great but I made it around the hall and back. Second one was a lot better, could actually get up and down steps the day afterwards. Out of the hospital in 3 days. Off the Percocets and driving in 10 days. Really didn't have any debilitating pain, just a dull ache. Went away after a couple of weeks. Biggest problem was the leg muscles had balled up in a knot, happened on both sides. Had that because the doc stretched the muscles getting the leg bone out of the incision so he could whack off the knob and stick in the implant. PT gal had to massage the leg, gradually reduced the knot over a couple of weeks and range of movement got greater each time. Opiates will plug you up, they recommend Ducolax or the like starting before the operation. Kaiser had a class for implant patients, what to do post-op, etc. Hope you get the same. I went with a spinal instead of general anesthetic both times, saved a lot of time with that crazy lung exerciser gadget that I had to do when I got the general with the heart surgery. Near as we can tell, the doc got both legs within a 1/4" of each other's length, pretty good for eyeballing it. Guy does a bunch of these a week, plus fixing other people's mistakes. Don't begrudge him the gold Rolex at all. Biggest thing since is the change in mood, much brighter outlook on things. Hadn't realized how much that constant dull ache colored things mood-wise. Can get up and down ladders and deer stands, can pick up and move tools that I'd lost the ability to lift. Stan |
#9
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![]() wrote in message ... On Dec 6, 7:24 am, Ivan Vegvary wrote: Kind of metal related. Getting a new hip (metal) on Thursday. Been bothering me for over 25 years. Funny about pain. Can come on very sloooowly. You kind of don't feel it but people around you sense it. My doctor convinced me to take a shot in the hip and see if my lifestyle changes. I didn't notice any change, but my SWMBO said I became much more active. Instead of one trip to the shop (100 ft., carrying as much as I can) I made 20-30 trips, thoughtlessly. Also lost 10 lbs. in about 2 weeks time. Shot lasted exactly 4 weeks and then I realized that I had been in pain all along (prior to the shot). Most significantly SWMBO said I was no longer crabby during that period! If any of you have “been there, done that” I would like to hear from you. Thanks, Ivan Vegvary Went through two of these a couple of years ago 6 months apart, left one was worst and first. Used "cobalt-chrome" implants, fancy phrase for Stellite, said it would last 20+ years. Both hips were out of the sockets, grinding on the pelvic bone, no cartilage left. Had put up with that for years. Doc saw the X-rays, said, "when do you want the surgery?". Had to do a heart bypass first, found that problem with the pre-op checkout for the hips, so had to wait a year after that. Would be in a wheelchair or the ground if I hadn't had everything taken care of. First one took about 7 hours. DO WHAT THE PT PERSON SAYS!!! If you don't, you won't have full joint movement. Do the exercises, no matter how it hurts. Had me up on my feet the day after, didn't feel so great but I made it around the hall and back. Second one was a lot better, could actually get up and down steps the day afterwards. Out of the hospital in 3 days. Off the Percocets and driving in 10 days. Really didn't have any debilitating pain, just a dull ache. Went away after a couple of weeks. Biggest problem was the leg muscles had balled up in a knot, happened on both sides. Had that because the doc stretched the muscles getting the leg bone out of the incision so he could whack off the knob and stick in the implant. PT gal had to massage the leg, gradually reduced the knot over a couple of weeks and range of movement got greater each time. Opiates will plug you up, they recommend Ducolax or the like starting before the operation. Kaiser had a class for implant patients, what to do post-op, etc. Hope you get the same. I went with a spinal instead of general anesthetic both times, saved a lot of time with that crazy lung exerciser gadget that I had to do when I got the general with the heart surgery. Near as we can tell, the doc got both legs within a 1/4" of each other's length, pretty good for eyeballing it. Guy does a bunch of these a week, plus fixing other people's mistakes. Don't begrudge him the gold Rolex at all. Biggest thing since is the change in mood, much brighter outlook on things. Hadn't realized how much that constant dull ache colored things mood-wise. Can get up and down ladders and deer stands, can pick up and move tools that I'd lost the ability to lift. Stan Damn fine post, sir. Do those exercises no matter how much they hurt. I wish I could have seen how I'd be now without the stupid (on my part) ATV accident that broke my back. I'd be cruisin'................ Steve |
#10
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On Tue, 6 Dec 2011 11:32:29 -0600, "Snag" wrote:
Ivan Vegvary wrote: Kind of metal related. Getting a new hip (metal) on Thursday. Been bothering me for over 25 years. Funny about pain. Can come on very sloooowly. You kind of don't feel it but people around you sense it. My doctor convinced me to take a shot in the hip and see if my lifestyle changes. I didn't notice any change, but my SWMBO said I became much more active. Instead of one trip to the shop (100 ft., carrying as much as I can) I made 20-30 trips, thoughtlessly. Also lost 10 lbs. in about 2 weeks time. Shot lasted exactly 4 weeks and then I realized that I had been in pain all along (prior to the shot). Most significantly SWMBO said I was no longer crabby during that period! If any of you have “been there, done that” I would like to hear from you. Thanks, Ivan Vegvary Chronic lower back pain . Some days worse , especially in stormy weather . Mine's probably not as severe as many , but it's *always* there . Most days I take nothing , sometimes a couple of ibuprofen , occasionally it's bad enough for something stronger . And my grandkids call me Grumpaw . Ive had 2 back surgeries, 14 broken bones, heart surgery and Ive been shot 3, and bayoneted once and stabbed once. I take no meds for pain but use autohypnosis, which really does work http://www.thread-of-awareness.com/HYPNO1.HTM I also use it for relaxation http://www.mindtools.com/stress/Rela...lfHypnosis.htm Try it..it may well help those with chronic pain issues. I use it regularly and it does indeed work for me. Gunner One could not be a successful Leftwinger without realizing that, in contrast to the popular conception supported by newspapers and mothers of Leftwingers, a goodly number of Leftwingers are not only narrow-minded and dull, but also just stupid. Gunner Asch |
#11
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On Tue, 6 Dec 2011 06:24:40 -0800 (PST), Ivan Vegvary
wrote: Kind of metal related. Getting a new hip (metal) on Thursday. Been bothering me for over 25 years. Funny about pain. Can come on very sloooowly. You kind of don't feel it but people around you sense it. My doctor convinced me to take a shot in the hip and see if my lifestyle changes. I didn't notice any change, but my SWMBO said I became much more active. Instead of one trip to the shop (100 ft., carrying as much as I can) I made 20-30 trips, thoughtlessly. Also lost 10 lbs. in about 2 weeks time. Shot lasted exactly 4 weeks and then I realized that I had been in pain all along (prior to the shot). Most significantly SWMBO said I was no longer crabby during that period! If any of you have “been there, done that” I would like to hear from you. Thanks, Ivan Vegvary Greetings Ivan, I have not had a hip replacement myself but I do knoe several men who have had either hip or knee replacements. In every case they have been very happy with the new joints. Chronic pain is indeed something that can have a really strong negative effect on your quality of life. If artificial wrist joints were made that can stand up to the typical loads that metalworking and land maintenance put on them I would get them installed asap. So good luck and enjoy! And after the installation be sure to do all the physical therapy. I learned that physical therapy done right can make a huge difference in the outcome. After several reconstructive surgeries and the therapy required subsequent to the surgeries I witnessed people who would not do what they were told who ended up having limited range of motion. People who had lesser injuries than mine but outcomes worse than mine. I saw this several times, enough to know it wasn't that I was just healing better. So get the hip, do the exercises, and you'll get all the benefits. Eric |
#12
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![]() My 80+ yo neighbor broke his hip teaming his oxen in rocky woodland. Toughed it out for two weeks (!) because, you know, you only go to the hospital to die. So he went to the hospital to die and they put in a prosthetic joint. The the PT babe comes around and says, "Do thus and so and the push as hard as you can." Well, the PT babe sees flabby, weak retired accountant octegenarians. So Sammy pushes and his new hip simply pops out of its socket. Well, he's been loading and unloading a cord of wood every day plus feeding and driving his oxen before the woods accident. Not flabby. Surgeon resets his hip, chagrinned PT babe does her thing more carefully. And he doesn't die. Six months later he's out in the woods again, loading cordwood with his oxen and went on doing that till nearly 90, the year before he died. Among people I know, there's a total of 5 hips, all of them success. ObMetalwork: Circa 1973, an MD friend brought me a metal hip ball that he'd fished out of the OR sink -- shiny, pretty thing. (Replaced because of a bad rection to the alloy in that particular patient. Doesn't happen much anymore.) He wanted me to make a door knocker out of it. So I did and had it on display at a craft market where he was to pick it up. Annnnnnddd.... A surgeon came by, saw the knocker and threw a hissy fit. Bad taste, I had no right, where did I steal it, what surgeon gave it to me, not right for people to see such a thing yada yada. Managed to get rid of him before my friend showed up. -- Mike Spencer Nova Scotia, Canada |
#13
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On Tue, 6 Dec 2011 06:24:40 -0800 (PST), Ivan Vegvary
wrote: Kind of metal related. Getting a new hip (metal) on Thursday. Been bothering me for over 25 years. Funny about pain. Can come on very sloooowly. You kind of don't feel it but people around you sense it. My doctor convinced me to take a shot in the hip and see if my lifestyle changes. I didn't notice any change, but my SWMBO said I became much more active. Instead of one trip to the shop (100 ft., carrying as much as I can) I made 20-30 trips, thoughtlessly. Also lost 10 lbs. in about 2 weeks time. Shot lasted exactly 4 weeks and then I realized that I had been in pain all along (prior to the shot). Most significantly SWMBO said I was no longer crabby during that period! If any of you have “been there, done that” I would like to hear from you. Thanks, Ivan Vegvary Only one thing I can pass on from Mom, specifically about getting both your knees done but it probably applies to hips too: If you need them both done, do them both in one shot and get it over with. One operation, One recovery, One PT and retraining period, and you are Done With It and back in your little Stick car and back to your active life. The surgeons and hospital staff don't like it and will resist doing it that way, because the surgery takes almost twice as long but they only get paid a small premium for the extra time - Less that they could get for getting two people through the operating room (one joint each) in the same day, and they get to go to Lunch on time. The Hospital doesn't like it, because they only get one operating room charge out of you, and one recovery stay... But SCREW THEM, it's your body. You really want to go under General Anesthesia and through all that associated crap twice? I sure the hell don't, and hope I never have to - but that's the way to go. -- Bruce -- |
#14
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![]() "Bruce L. Bergman (munged human readable)" wrote But SCREW THEM, it's your body. You really want to go under General Anesthesia and through all that associated crap twice? I sure the hell don't, and hope I never have to - but that's the way to go. -- Bruce -- I've been asleep and awake during major procedures. The ones while awake were quite interesting, and the conversation revealed a lot to me. Still, I'm not sure if I could tolerate a whole hip replacement under a local. Sometimes, I just want to sleep through it, and not know. Steve |
#15
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On Tue, 6 Dec 2011 06:24:40 -0800 (PST), Ivan Vegvary
wrote: Kind of metal related. Getting a new hip (metal) on Thursday. Been bothering me for over 25 years. Funny about pain. Can come on very sloooowly. You kind of don't feel it but people around you sense it. My doctor convinced me to take a shot in the hip and see if my lifestyle changes. I didn't notice any change, but my SWMBO said I became much more active. Instead of one trip to the shop (100 ft., carrying as much as I can) I made 20-30 trips, thoughtlessly. Also lost 10 lbs. in about 2 weeks time. Shot lasted exactly 4 weeks and then I realized that I had been in pain all along (prior to the shot). Most significantly SWMBO said I was no longer crabby during that period! If any of you have “been there, done that” I would like to hear from you. Thanks, Ivan Vegvary Hey Ivan, I had 2 new knees done in 2008. Working great. Brian Lawson, Bothwell, Ontario. |
#16
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In article ,
Larry Jaques wrote: On Tue, 6 Dec 2011 06:24:40 -0800 (PST), Ivan Vegvary wrote: Kind of metal related. Getting a new hip (metal) on Thursday. Been bothering me for over 25 years. Funny about pain. Can come on very sloooowly. You kind of don't feel it but people around you sense it. My doctor convinced me to take a shot in the hip and see if my lifestyle changes. I didn't notice any change, but my SWMBO said I became much more active. Instead of one trip to the shop (100 ft., carrying as much as I can) I made 20-30 trips, thoughtlessly. Also lost 10 lbs. in about 2 weeks time. Shot lasted exactly 4 weeks and then I realized that I had been in pain all along (prior to the shot). Most significantly SWMBO said I was no longer crabby during that period! If any of you have “been there, done that” I would like to hear from you. I haven't been there, but my neighor 4 doors down is on his 4th and last hip. One leg is 3 inches shorter than the other now and he wears a builtup shoe sole. Needless to say, he's on disability. I can ask him for advice for you if you like, Ivan. I think he's tried both plastics and metal during his 60 years on Earth. This sounds like he had a surgical infection that got into the bone. Joe Gwinn |
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