Hip pain
Then I headed off to the Ortho dr and after a simple xray he says you have terrible DJD with several bone spurs. So pretty much bone on bone around my entire left hip. He has put me on Mobic ( went off Celebrex when I had WLS back in Jan.) and I go in for a Cortesone shot on Monday. I am not a happy camper, but hope that the shot helps? I am scared to death of the shot. Has anyone had this done?
I guess if it doesn't work then we look into a hip replacement.
Keep your fingers crossed for me. I am so ready to be able to walk again. It has been a long two years. Been working out in the pool for a year now and need some change!
I've had cortisone shots in both hips to treat chronic trocanter bursitis. Out of maybe 10 shots, only 1 hurt. A lidocaine injection can help numb the area before the cortisone shot, but the 1 time it hurt me, it wasn't the needle stick that hurt - the pain was too deep for that. The other times, all I felt was pressure - kind of like I used to feel getting a saline injection in my port.
My ortho doc won't give me any more cortisone shots because of the risk of damage to the joints. My internist thinks the risk is low, but I don't ask for a shot unless I'm really miserable because I don't need joint damage on top of the bursitis. The shots help a lot but the effect wears off in 6-8 weeks, so the shots are not a long term solution for me.
Jean McMillan c.2009-2013 - Always a bandster at heart
author of Bandwagon (TM), Strategies for Success with the Adjustable Gastric Band & Bandwagon Cookery. Bandwagon for Kindle now available on Amazon. Read my blog at: jean-onthebandwagon.blogspot.com
I get injections in my spine and it isn't the needle stick at all that hurts. When the medicine goes in you might feel some pressure and maybe a little pain but just about the time you decide that "shucky darn that hurts" it is done. I have injections in 3 different places on both sides and sometimes I have some discomfort and many times not. Mostly the relief I get is more than worth any discomfort. One thing you need to know is that time time for a cortisone injection to work is variable. I have had some that gave immediate relief and some that took as long as 4 weeks to take effect. Usually it is somewhere in between.
Jean and I both understand the frustration of losing all your weight and feeling like a ball of fire but having chronic pain that holds you back. I had to retire from a much loved career because of chronic pain, as well as avoiding activities that interest me for the first time in many years. All I can say is that I am much better off overall than I was 3 years ago.