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“I’m not going to lie, this is going to hurt”
That’s what my delightful doctor said to me. Haha.
I have trigger finger, and not the good kind. For about a month, my middle and ring-finger were hopelessly locked in a semi-curl. I could massage them throughout the day and they loosen up, but waking up the next morning put me back at square-1. Ouch. She suggested more rest and cortisone shots. Right into my hand. It didn’t hurt that bad. It didn’t tickle, but my wince was way over the top. Anticipation. I’ll lay off the yard work. Then. Boom. “Here have your second shingles injection”. A cutie came in and stuck me in the arm. That kinda hurt. “Hey, you want me to burn that off your hand?” Okay that hurt. Still hurts. In general, very Monday-like today. As I understand it, the shingles booster can produce flu-like symptoms. Anyone get laid out from this booster shot? |
Iam scheduled to get mine this month. Having to wait due to covid vaccine last month. tell me howit goes
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Yup, 2nd shingles hit me harder than 2nd Covid..
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We were supposed to have gotten our second shingrex shot back in Apr or May, but got the CV19 shots instead. I think we're going to try to get our second shingrex This coming Friday. I think they said 2-6 months, and that'll be well within that period.
So what's the cause of trigger finger, inflammation? Quote:
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My booster is way late. COVID just knocked out the option. She said there is a new memo stating late is better than never. If anything changes, I’ll just start over.
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That's probably the most painful shot I give. I think it's because there are so many nerve endings in the palm.
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Ahh, what a timely post! I went to my hand surgeon today for trigger finger on my middle and index finger. Got the shot in both fingers and it wasn't bad. Been doing this for a while and she said I should think about surgery. She did the index finger on my right hand a few years ago.
You want a painful shot? My shoulder guy gives me a shot for my rotator cuff. He has to walk the needle along the bone and when he starts injecting the corticosteroid. Moves the needle a little and injects some more. That shot is damned painful! When I am really sick, my doc gives me a Rocephin shot. Holy Mother of God, that thing hurts! |
Shingrix shot 1 did nothing to me, nada. Due for shot 2 anytime now...
Trigger finger: The doc initially gave me 3x800 mg of advil per day. Max dose I think. It made me so loopy I could not take it, advil, who knew... Trigger finger ended up going away on its own when I stopped doing what was triggering it (in my case I was painting my entire house) and started mousing left handed. Took a whole year to heal itself 100%. I can sometimes feel it attempting a comeback when wrenching hard, I stop... Apparently I'm falling apart. On another semi-related note I developed ulnar nerve issues where some fingers would go numb if I bent my elbow, esp at night. Saw 2 docs and both told me the only lasting option was surgery to transpose the nerve and bypass the elbow canal... I'm currently in Europe and on a whim went back to see an old osteopath I used to use when playing competitive tennis (to fix ankles and stuff)... Haven't found a good one in the states yet. The guy stretched and cracked this and that, my #%^$^ finger numbness that I've had daily (well nightly) for 2 years is GONE. Just like that. He said it was pinched in my cervicals, not the elbow. crack boom. Unbelievable. I am NOT a believer in non-scientific medicine and Chiro-balooney-science makes me laugh, but hell, the osteo guy worked and it's not placebo... I have slept w.o my elbow brace for a week now... Just saying also explore acupuncture and other stuff before doing surgery, if it ever comes to that... |
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When I was in college, I changed the oil in my cousin's Honda. The oil drain plug was on really tight so I had to bust it loose. I also split my finger open doing so. Went to the urgent care and the doc needed to stitch it up. He injected the numbing solution into the split in my finger and along with the excruciating pain, I swear it felt like it was going to burst.
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Sweet weepin' Jesu aren't we a bunch of busted up geezers, myself included.
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I'm told the nasal Covid test is like an alien abduction. I'd probably kick the nurse in the nether regions...reflexively of course.
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I dare anyone to find a forum where Shingles, CV19, trigger fingers and cortisone shots are all discussed in the same thread.
I'm due for the Shingles shot too- Higgins thread on how much fun that wasn't has given me a push to get that taken care of. I've only had one go-round with trigger finger (keep the safety on for heavens sake) that was "triggered" by brush painting the exterior of our house years ago. It improved after I finished painting but it's still easy to get a flareup if I do more silly things like mix and pour concrete, lots of raking- anything that has "forceful gripping" involved. My days as a trapeze artist are over before they began. |
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So what you're saying is that you now have "GI Joe, kung fu grip" |
I have Dupuytren's (du-pwe-TRANZ) contracture in both of my hands. Was treated for it once already. It never goes away, but the treatment will last 5-10 years.
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https://www.mayoclinic.org/-/media/k...ensthu_jpg.jpg It is similar to trigger finger in that your fingers are curled over. Treatment is either surgery, where they open up your hand and scrape off the knots of tissue off your ligaments, or you get a shot of something called "Xiaflex" that dissolves the hardened tissue and then the doctor manipulates your hand to straighten out the fingers. I chose the shot thinking it would be less painful. How wrong I was. Note: Any medicine that begins with an "X" is something that may cause a great amount of pain. In order to dissolve the hardening, the doctor has to inject multiple shots of Xiaflex in order to get the effected areas surrounded by the medifine. The next day, the doctor inject a numbing agent into the same area before he yanks on your fingers to snap the ligaments and tendons free. Suffice it to say, when the doctor injected me, I saw Jesus. I have a high tolerance for pain, but this one had me wanting to crawl into a corner and cry like a baby. And then I had it done on the other hand as well. Despite the pain, it was worth getting the flexibility in my hands back! Fun fact - there are a lot of nerve endings in your hands. A lot. |
dang Z!
I once had something cut off the bottom of my foot. the podiatrist said they would have to strap me in if they were to inject me thru the bottom. get this, they came in with a long needle thru the top of my foot. it still hurt, but I couldn't imagine the sole. |
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