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Mid Carpal instability

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14 years 3 months ago #29359 by
Replied by on topic Re:Mid Carpal instability
Hi Scott...To be honest ,I wasnt too involved at the time apart from hospital delivery and collection.....and the usual son duties.....She has had Dementia for past three years and no chance of asking her ;)

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14 years 3 months ago #29360 by Scott_1984
tonypark wrote:

Hi Scott...To be honest ,I wasnt too involved at the time apart from hospital delivery and collection.....and the usual son duties.....She has had Dementia for past three years and no chance of asking her ;)



Oh ok, Thanks anyway tony :)

Sorry to hear about Your Mum's dementia, *HUGS*

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13 years 8 months ago #30821 by Scott_1984
adie 582 wrote:

Hey,

I suffer from mid carpal instabililty too.

I have had it for about 4 years now i had an operation which didnt work.

I have it in both of my wrists so find daily chores difficult sometimes.

The surgeon who did my operation told me it wouldn't get worse,

But I feel like it is getting worse. I found it hard to pull a christmas cracker today!

I just want to know what I should do?! will it get worse with time?

My left wrist is worse than my right and the bones in My left wrist move around quite freely.

I would just like to know what i should do!

Please help!

Thanks

Adie<br><br>Post edited by: Scott_1984, at: 2009/12/29 04:17


Hi Mid Carpal Instability (MCI)/Palmar Midcarpal Instability (PMCI) Suffers & Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy\Complex Regional Pain Syndrome 1&2 (RSD/CRPS 1&2) & The 3 Stages/Phases Of RSD/CRPS 1&2 Suffers,

Its Me again & Just remembered I had found this USA Legal Firm Years Ago Through Doing My Mid Carpal Instability & Wrist Instability Searches & Legal Cases Too.

Mid Carpal Instability: www.hickeylawfirm.com/html/injuries.html?submit=

Arm, Hand, Wrist, Elbow, and Shoulder:

Arm, hand, wrist, elbow, and shoulder injuries can be the result of fractures, ligament damage, carpal tunnel syndrome, sprains, nerve damage, or muscle problems. Causes of these injuries include repeated job duties (carpel tunnel syndrome), car accidents, sports accidents, work-related accidents, and falls.

The wrist is one of the most complicated joints in the body. The hand is at the top of this joint. In the hand, the bones in the finger meet at the carpal bones. This is a series of eight bones arranged in two rows that articulate - that is, move in relation to - the lower arm bones, the radius and ulna. The lower arm bones, the radius and ulna, move in relation to each other. If the distal end of one those bones, that is the end farthest away from the shoulder, is fractured, it may alter the way the two bones move about each other, and thus, may alter the range of motion and general ability to move.

The Legal Team at Hickey Law Firm, P.A., is experienced with handling many severe hand, wrist, and arm injuries. These injuries have included mid-carpal instability caused by ligament damage to the mid-carpal ligaments in the right hand of a chiropractor who had tripped and fallen onto his hand (resulting in a settlement of $650,000). In that case, the plaintiff received only one surgery, a pinning of two of the bones in the hand. That did not work. There is no type of surgery to repair the ligaments that result in mid-carpal instability. This is instability between the two rows of bones that sit at the top of the forearm bones, radius and ulna, and below the finger bones. This instability resulted in popping of the arm bones whenever the plaintiff moved his right hand and an inability to put weight or pressure on his hand. This is a permanent injury and has caused the plaintiff, a chiropractor, to lose substantial income in his practice.

www.hickeylawfirm.com/html/injuries.html?submit=

&

RSD/CRPS: www.hickeylawfirm.com/html/injuries.html?submit=

We also have been involved with a case in which a restaurant allowed a booth to remain in disrepair. The booth had a hole in the seat. When the Plaintiff put her hand on the seat to slide over, her hand thrust into the hole and onto the edge of a slat underneath the seat. That slat, without breaking the skin, tore or severed the scapho-lumate ligament. That is the ligament that holds together the two bones that are the cornerstone of the bones in the hand, the scaphoid and the lunate bones. Various surgical repairs were attempted on this very serious injury, mostly without results. Our client also suffered Reflex Sympathy Disorder (RSD), which caused her hand to swell, become reddened and mottled, and to be sensitive to both heat and cold. The RSD was treated with 11 nerve block injections. Our client underwent five separate surgeries, three of which were fairly minor. The last surgery was a fusion of her right wrist. Our client was an accountant and now is a part-time bookkeeper and lost income. This case resulted in a jury verdict of $1.733 million.

So In America Thanks To Mr. David Litchman & Other American Consultant Orthopeadic & Trauma Hand & Upper-Limb Surgeons Bring Both Mid Carpal Instability & RSD/CRPS To Light World Wide & In America.

Take Care & Take It Easy :)

*HUGS*

Scott :)

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12 years 11 months ago #35190 by Scott_1984
I Have Finally Today Sent Off A Few E-Mails To My Local Labour MP - Mrs. Meg Hilier & Her Key Staff/Team For Hackney South & Shoreditch & Shadow Secretary Of State for Energy And Climate Change Teams/Staff

&

The Department Of Health & The British Society for Surgery of the Hand (BSSH), Seeking Where I Can Obtain NHS & Private Hospitals STATS/RECORDS On Mid Carpal Instability (MCI)/Palmar Midcarpal Instability (PMCI)

&

Could You Please Kindly Ask:

The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE),

The British Medical Association (BMA),

The British Society for Surgery of the Hand (BSSH),

The British Orthopaedic Association (BOA),

The British Orthopaedic Research Society (BORS),

The British Orthopaedic Specialists Association (BOSA),

The British Trauma Society (BTS),

The British Orthopaedic Sports Trauma & Arthroscopy Association (BOSTAA),

The British Orthopaedic Trainees Association (BOTA),

The British Society for Children’s Orthopaedic Surgery (BSCOS),

The British Limb Reconstruction Society (BLRS),

The Royal College of Radiologists' (RCR),

The Chartered Society of Physiotherapy (CPS),

Asking Them What They Are Doing To Train Thier " Staff/Hospitals/Consultants/Doctors/Nurses/Radiologists/Physiotherapists " In Diagnosing & Treating " Mid Carpal Instability (MCI)/Palmar Midcarpal Instability (PMCI), Carpal Instability, Wrist Instability, ".

Its Taken Me Months To Deal With It, I Am Hoping To Get Some Good Facts,Stats, & Records, On Mid Carpal Instability (MCI)/Palmar Midcarpal Instability (PMCI) & How To Treat It,Diagnose It, & All Kinds Of Advice.

To Date The NHS Wesbite Doesn't have Any Information Or Advice On Mid Carpal Instability (MCI)/Palmar Midcarpal Instability, Although There asn't NHS Advice On: Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy\Complex Regional Pain Syndrome 1&2 (RSD/CRPS 1&2) & The 3 Stages/Phase Of: Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy\Complex Regional Pain Syndrome 1&2 (RSD/CRPS 1&2), Until 2007 On The NHS Website.

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