finger amputation recovery?
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hey guys, |
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How much of the tips? |
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My partner chopped off the tip of her pinky finger on the 16th pitch of Lurking Fear. This is her self portrait from the summit a few hours later. This is Juli's amputated pinky, she named him Chubbs, at work a year later. Good luck with your injury. Juli was climbing less then 2 weeks later....still sporting her stitches. |
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In 2008 I lost the tip (just to the first knuckle) of my pointer finger on my dominant (left) hand. So not quite the same as yours, however, relevant insights I can offer are: |
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I ended up loosing a little below the 3rd knuckle on my middle and just below the fingernail on my ring. its been only 2 weeks and i already feel the others starting to compensate.. |
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Has Tommy Caldwell written anything about his recovery? Doesn't seem to hamper him. |
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shred-tahoe-gnar wrote: Craig how did she end up loosing it mid climb?It was a hauling accident. I was hauling, the bags got stuck under a roof, I went down the hauling side of the rope to free the bags, she had already cleaned the pitch and was at the anchor. She decided to help with the haul and put her hand on the loaded side of the rope at the same time I got the bags unstuck and with my weight on the hauling side it sucked her hand into the Protraxion. |
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Craig Martin wrote: it sucked her hand into the Protraxion.wow That's pretty gruesome |
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shred-tahoe-gnar wrote: wow That's pretty gruesomeGruesome.....i love that word. But it was nothing a little hand tape, ibuprofin and weed wouldn't fix. Your injury sounds a bit worse. |
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I am missing the tips of three fingers from frostbite. I'm not missing much and I still have the last knuckle/joint, just missing about half of the rest of the tips. It was painful and made climbing a bit more difficult in the short run, but long term I don't think it has affected me much at all. Frostbite was a little different as it took months to loose the tips and then heal well enough to do any climbing. |
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I lopped off the end of my right index a few years ago with a boulder rolling down talus. Recovery isn't the right word... it's more like adaptation. I was climbing again in 4 weeks. Today I climb more proficiently than I did before the loss. I've written some of the story online here. I will say this... ice climbing makes your stump cold. Real cold. |
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I am missing my left ring finger for about 6 years due to a table saw accident. I started climbing 6 months ago and have not let it bother me. I started climbing the same time as a friend of mine and we are virtually climbing at the same level at the gym. We have not ventured outdoors yet but plan to soon. If anything, I think it gives me an advantage because anywhere my lack of grip strength in that hand hinders me, I have to focus that much harder on my technique to push me through it. |
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Chris Norfolk wrote:I lopped off the end of my right index a few years ago with a boulder rolling down talus. Recovery isn't the right word... it's more like adaptation. I was climbing again in 4 weeks. Today I climb more proficiently than I did before the loss. I've written some of the story online here. I will say this... ice climbing makes your stump cold. Real cold.Oh oh oh. I want to see a bigger picture of this. |
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Some Dude wrote: Oh oh oh. I want to see a bigger picture of this.Sure. The docs trimmed back the bone to the last knuckle... which left the tendons and fleshy parts mostly intact... thus I had minimal function loss. Again... the only complaint is that cold weather ice/aid climbing makes the thing damn cold. Clicky here |
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Craig Martin wrote:My partner chopped off the tip of her pinky finger on the 16th pitch of Lurking Fear. This is her self portrait from the summit a few hours later. This is Juli's amputated pinky, she named him Chubbs, at work a year later. Good luck with your injury. Juli was climbing less then 2 weeks later....still sporting her stitches.I don't know Juli... but I do know that she's bad-ass for topping out that route in her condition. My experience was that a tight wrap in climbing tape solved the pain issues for about 2 hours. After that it was pretty much white-hot throbs. Lucky for me I was in the ER and on the morphine shortly thereafter. |
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Who needs finger tips when you're doing the wide stuff. Now you can practice on becoming a bad ass offwidth climber. Best of luck on your recovery. |
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Chris Norfolk wrote: I don't know Juli... but I do know that she's bad-ass for topping out that route in her condition. My experience was that a tight wrap in climbing tape solved the pain issues for about 2 hours. After that it was pretty much white-hot throbs. Lucky for me I was in the ER and on the morphine shortly thereafter.Juli is for sure a bad-ass. We got to the emergency room in Modesto 28 hours after the accident. The drive to Modesto out of the Valley was memorable because the morphine they gave her was making her violently ill. Pulled over 3 times for puking. I felt so bad for her, but it actually just became a comedy of errors and all we could do was laugh at ourselves. Then the eroom experience at 2:30 am was priceless. Finger injuries are way more common in climbing then one might think. |
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Thought others might find this interesting. I was lucky enough to get in contact with Tommy Caldwell right after the accident. Here's an email from him about his experience. |
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Jake Jones wrote:Some Dude, your pic is fucking priceless.Thank you. And Mr. Shiney Toots thanks you too. |
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Anyone have any experience with losing a ring finger? It would be kinda weird I think, two strong fingers, s gap, and then the pinkie. |
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wow Monty its pretty sweet to read that from Tommy... |