Has anyone successfully recovered from lumbar disc surgery?
SFC,
There is light at the end of the tunnel. I have had several surgeries durning my career. Five to be exact. The most difficult to bounce back from was lower back surgery (L4-L5/L5-S1). I waited three years before allowing the surgery to take place. I consulted several surgoens and other healthcare personel. Before you agree to surgery talk to as many doctors as you can. Remember, surgeons want to operate, General Practitioners want to medicate, Therapist want to provide exercises or stretches, etc... Choose what fits you and your life style.
I chose surgery but would not allow the surgeon to fuse my vertibre. We argued but it was my decision. In the end I had a long recovery (nearly 3 years) until I was back in good shape. Since surgery I have completed the Batton Death March at Whitesands (heavy category), Assessed and was selected for AWG, and am currently preparing for a Tough Mudder this summer. I score 288-295 on my APFT consistantly. Recovery was a slow process but it is possible to return or even improve your fitness level. Core, Core, Core!!!
The PROFILE bullet should not hurt you. But if your worried about it ask the Doc when
you see him that you want "Pain Management" before surgery. I am always against surgeries (although I
have had 5). If there is any way out of
getting surgery that is my first choice.
If you convince the doctor you want Pain Management I would also ask for
Physical Therapy as well. The Pain
Management is a series of localized NSAIDs placed directly at the afflicted
area. They use a needle and inject the
meds directly where your pain is. When I
went I was allowed 4 shots a year.
Although the meds wore off before the 3-4 month interval I was able to
take an APFT. I am not in any way
telling you to go that route. There is
always the possibility that you could do more harm than good. This was a choice I elected without my
doctors approval. I felt as you appear
to feel, that I wanted to push myself to achieve the standard. I think I scored 205. Much less than my normal but I did not push
myself to hard. I was worried I would hurt
my spinal cord or worse which would end my career. When I made it to Germany after the surgery
the EUROMED surgeon placed me on a very strict workout regimen that he
supervised. I am not in MUCH better
shape than I was before the surgery. I
still do many of his core exercises today.
Lastly, I would suggest you drop weight.
I was always a “Corn Fed” big guy.
Before surgery I stood 75” and weighted around 230lbs. Since surgery and with my new found training
focus, I am 73” (give or take ½ in) and weight 194-197 consistently. My surgery was 7-8 years ago and I have had
only one relapse in all this time. Stay
focused on your recovery and remove your ego from the equation. After my surgery I could not lift a gallon of
milk without great pain. Take it slow
and remember this type of recovery is a marathon and not a sprint to the
fastest recovery. Good luck
SFC J., my boss had the same procedure several years ago (twice in three years). He recovered well the first time and went back to PTing with the crew in under six months. He had good flexibility and strength after the surgery. However, the second time was worse, and his recovery wasn't as fast or complete. The second set of discs effected were a little lower in his lumbar spine, and had been more severely damaged. It may depend on the specifics regarding location and damage to your back.
Best of luck to you. Hope you get the relief from this that you need.
There are Physical therapists and sports medicine physicians that have been able to bring people from near paralysis to full function again. Hawaii may not be a bad option when looking for a therapist compared to Bliss, either. Keep in mind, that this will probably be a private therapist/trainer that won't be covered by Tri-care (Army Sports medicine is getting better, but still has a long way to go).
Secret from what I understand is stay positive, stay focused, set reasonable goals/expectations and stay with it. (Can't speak first hand, but have chatted with a few success stories).
At this point, I'd say damage done is done, make the PCS, and then seek medical advice is probably better that what you'll get at Bliss (Navy/Army/Air Force Facilities on the island) and commuting to a therapist in Honolulu will be easier than Tuscon or Dallas. More money there to attract physicians/therapists with better reputations as well.
SFC,
Not to increase your worry, but yes it can be difficult to bounce back from that surgery. I've been a surgical tech for 17 years and Ortho/Neuro spine was one of my specialties. You have to commit to your physical therapy, follow your doctors advice and recommendations. And most importantly, leave behind any unrealistic expectations. Look for pain relief, and be able to accept that your days of smoking the APFT may be over.

Surgery
