Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP did your doctor recommend wearing a boot? My podiatrist required me to wear it 2 weeks for post tib tendonitis. For a tear she would have recommended 6 weeks. The boot is awful and clunky but it did help.
I wore a boot for about 8 weeks last fall. It didn't do much to help. PT did some good. The first steroid shot helped a bunch for about 8 weeks. Second one did next to nothing.
Anonymous wrote:OP did your doctor recommend wearing a boot? My podiatrist required me to wear it 2 weeks for post tib tendonitis. For a tear she would have recommended 6 weeks. The boot is awful and clunky but it did help.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Tell me what recovery slides are, please! I don't have them. I'm wearing my orthotics all of the time, which pretty much limits me to running shoes.
I do have some luck with a combo of the ice, theragun and an incline board, but that just makes the pain bearable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m PP, about surgery recovery- I went home with less pain than I went in with! It felt miraculous. That lasted about 4-5 days, then there was some aching, but minimal pain. They had told me to take narcotics the first few nights, but I did not need them. I didn’t enjoy being on crutches, but the knee scooter is really helpful. After 2 weeks, I switched to a boot- so not bad at all. Are you sure you’ll be full no - weigh bearing for the full 3 months? Being in the boot is slow at first, but pretty easy after a week.
After 8 weeks (2 w/ crutches and 6 in the boot), I got freed! That was only a few weeks ago, but going well. For me, it was easily worth the uncomfortable stage.
The doctor told me that the post tib repair is one of the bigger surgeries. It involves harvesting a tendon from one side of my foot to graft onto the other side. It sounds major and really awful.
Appreciate the doc recommendation.
Anonymous wrote:I’m PP, about surgery recovery- I went home with less pain than I went in with! It felt miraculous. That lasted about 4-5 days, then there was some aching, but minimal pain. They had told me to take narcotics the first few nights, but I did not need them. I didn’t enjoy being on crutches, but the knee scooter is really helpful. After 2 weeks, I switched to a boot- so not bad at all. Are you sure you’ll be full no - weigh bearing for the full 3 months? Being in the boot is slow at first, but pretty easy after a week.
After 8 weeks (2 w/ crutches and 6 in the boot), I got freed! That was only a few weeks ago, but going well. For me, it was easily worth the uncomfortable stage.