What Happened Inside My Leg?

Filed under: Motorcycles, Daily Life, Korea — Jeff in Korea at 11:08 am on Monday, January 29, 2007

The healing process continues. I’m off of crutches and using a cane. My thigh bone is very nearly completely healed. Now I am working on rebuilding the muscles in my right leg. Due to four months of not using any muscles, my right leg is mush. But the muscle is coming back fairly quickly. At my last visit, the doctor hinted that I might be able to get rid of the cane after about two weeks.

Now that the the major physical worries are over, I have some time to reflect a bit on the injuries.

After I slammed into the concrete pole on 23 September 2006 and rolled along the ground for a bit, my right thigh bone looked like this:

The fact that my femur broke into four large pieces and several smaller chunks most likely saved me from a compound fracture with bones jamming through my skin, major soft tissue damage, and blood pouring everywhere.

Surgery several hours after the accident fixed the break. The doctors but in a titanium plate and 11 screws. Apparently a drill bit broke off during the surgery, which I didn’t know about until months later. The post surgery leg looked like this on 23 September 2006 (the staples running up the side of my leg are visible):

I was discharged from the hospital five weeks later. Seven days after being released from the hospital, I went for x-rays and a check up on 4 November 2006. I took the x-rays, but the doctor was not available on that day to review the x-rays. What no one knew was that the titanium plate in my leg had cracked:

Note the few stray bone fragments. They are buried deep in my muscle tissue and will remain there forever.

The next morning, 5 November 2006, I woke up, and when I moved my right leg, my thigh bowed up like an upside down “U”. I didn’t know why it did that. It didn’t hurt, so I rationalized that it was something do to with the muscle.

The next morning, 6 November 2006, my leg was not any better. I went to the hospital to find out what was wrong. The doctor looked at X-ray taken two days earlier and exclaimed “Oh shit!” He told me the plate had broken and that my bone had re-broken. He immediately re-admitted me to the hospital and sent me down for more x-rays. My leg looked like this:

From another angle:

Well…that explained why my thigh was shaped like an upside down “U” when I moved it.

I underwent my second surgery to remove the broken plate, saw about 1cm off my thigh bone to make the ends flat, screw on a new, lager, wider, thicker plate, and to graft some bone from my thigh onto my leg. After surgery on 7 November 2006, the new plate looks like this (The broken drill bit can be seen in this picture):

15 Comments »

Comment by Songtan1

29 January 2007 @ 8:34 pm

OUCH!!! I hope you never have to go through anything like that aqain.

BTW. Hows’s the bike coming along?

Comment by Jeff in Korea

29 January 2007 @ 11:23 pm

I just paid for the parts today. They should arrive in approximately three weeks and it will take a month or so to rebuild the bike. So, I will probably be riding again by the middle or end of March.

Comment by Horace Jeffery Hodges

2 February 2007 @ 4:26 am

Ouch is right! You look like you’ve got an alien embedded in your leg.

Jeffery Hodges

* * *

Comment by Richardson

2 February 2007 @ 9:07 am

Are you going to see about compensation from the manufacturer of the faulty titanium plate? Seemed like a no go before, just wondering if anything has changed on that front.

Comment by Nomad

2 February 2007 @ 9:52 am

A cane, eh? Keep it, and change your name to ‘House’

Heh heh

Comment by Jeff in Korea

2 February 2007 @ 5:04 pm

Jeffery: Maybe one of Kevin’s giant centipedes.

Richardson: still waiting for the results of the testing on the original appliance to come back. I’m feeling more and more like it was some sort off doctor error. If I do take any action, it will be after treatment is completed.

Nomad: Yeah.. except I’m crankier and less loveable. i need to find out how House attaches his cane to his bike… i’m looking for some sort of cane attachment because I will still be using my cane when the repairs to my bike are finished.

Comment by Norman Gregory Fernandez, Esq.

3 February 2007 @ 7:09 am

Jeff you were not kidding were you! I hope you recover soon!

Norm

Comment by Songtan1

3 February 2007 @ 12:41 pm

Keep the cane with the bike permanently. If, God forbid, you were to have a similiar accident, you could use it as a ski pole.

Comment by Jeff in Korea

3 February 2007 @ 1:45 pm

Norman,

I WISH I was kidding.The past 4 months would have been much more enjoyable and the next several less stressful.

Comment by required name

12 February 2007 @ 12:12 pm

Here’s hoping that, come March, the godess of statistical probabilities will remember you already HAD a major accident as you tool around on your refurbished bike.

Stay safe.

Comment by fencerider

14 February 2007 @ 4:45 am

On the cane issue, you could get those telescoping canes the mountainclimbers use for quick on and offs and or have a cool chrome cylinder mounted to the frame (hey! maybe a chrome cane too, with H-D etching :) have fun with it…this is the land of jury-rigging

Comment by Jeff in Korea

14 February 2007 @ 10:46 am

Fencerider: That’s what I’m using. Hopefully, I won’t need it by the time the bike is finished, but, if I do, I am sure that I will think of something creative.

Comment by charo

18 March 2007 @ 9:08 pm

after i read your story i felt worried n my self because i also had a titanium plates n my both legs and also in my face..i was accident 2years ago, but the plates still on my legs, the doctor said 3-4years from now before the plates discharged inside my legs but the titanium plates inside my face is being permanent. im worried bout mine..=(
ill pray for your safetiness dear.. good luck to us..& God Bless….

Comment by Judy

26 July 2007 @ 1:26 am

Jeff, I too had a titanium plate break but mine was in my neck. My bone did not rebreak but I still have a lot of pain at times from the nerve pinching. Were you compensated in any way for this? Mine was too long ago.

Comment by Jeff in Korea

26 July 2007 @ 1:58 am

Judy,

Your neck???? Yeesh!

Ironically, while I was laying in bed a day or so after the second surgery watching House on TV. Dr. House made the comment, “Titanium…That’s the stuff they make nuclear subs out of, pieces of it just don’t break off.”

I will probably start my quest for compensation by the end of this year. Hopefully, I will get at least the cost of the first surgery and room expenses. Korea doesn’t give huge punitive damages like some other countries.

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