He immediately said he suspected Charcot and after confirming through X-rays, he casted it. He then called Al's primary at the VA and chewed her out for not referring him. That was 2005. Now in 2011, he's been through multiple surgeries and is scheduled for another in July. The VA docs at the VA hospital predicted that he'd lose both legs from the knee down but his podiatrist up at Temple has fought tooth and nail to save his feet
When my husband's Charcot started, his left foot was red and hot. I have many years working in the medical profession and my first thought was cellulitis or some kind of infection. He is 100% disabled due to Agent Orange exposure while in Vietnam and I made him go right to the doctor. His primary care had no clue and instead of referring him to the VA podiatrist (who are excellent), he was given antibiotics. After 10 days with no noticable improvement, I took him to a civilian podiatrist
Exactly what happened to me. I was admitted to hospital for over a week and was released with a cast, which did not work for me. Have developed an ulcer on the bottom of foot. Even had oxygen therapy. It was like throwing a glass of water on a forest fire. Now the surgeon wants to amputate. I am so scared. I wanted to avoid this at all cost, but I have everyone yelling at me to get it done. I am single, with no family close by. I never thought my life would end this way. God bless you!
@belleairbaby good luck to you... this is what i have but not this severe. although it has kept me off work for a year. the doctor i go to told me to "offload".which is basicaly to stay off your feet with either a wheelchair and/or crutches. and i also had one of those plastic aircast to wear to keep that ankle joint from moving
He immediately said he suspected Charcot and after confirming through X-rays, he casted it. He then called Al's primary at the VA and chewed her out for not referring him. That was 2005. Now in 2011, he's been through multiple surgeries and is scheduled for another in July. The VA docs at the VA hospital predicted that he'd lose both legs from the knee down but his podiatrist up at Temple has fought tooth and nail to save his feet
msflitter 9 months ago
When my husband's Charcot started, his left foot was red and hot. I have many years working in the medical profession and my first thought was cellulitis or some kind of infection. He is 100% disabled due to Agent Orange exposure while in Vietnam and I made him go right to the doctor. His primary care had no clue and instead of referring him to the VA podiatrist (who are excellent), he was given antibiotics. After 10 days with no noticable improvement, I took him to a civilian podiatrist
msflitter 9 months ago
Exactly what happened to me. I was admitted to hospital for over a week and was released with a cast, which did not work for me. Have developed an ulcer on the bottom of foot. Even had oxygen therapy. It was like throwing a glass of water on a forest fire. Now the surgeon wants to amputate. I am so scared. I wanted to avoid this at all cost, but I have everyone yelling at me to get it done. I am single, with no family close by. I never thought my life would end this way. God bless you!
belleairbaby 1 year ago
@belleairbaby good luck to you... this is what i have but not this severe. although it has kept me off work for a year. the doctor i go to told me to "offload".which is basicaly to stay off your feet with either a wheelchair and/or crutches. and i also had one of those plastic aircast to wear to keep that ankle joint from moving
TheCasinohustler 1 year ago