History of My Injury and Treatment
9/98: Rolfing injury to R scapula, trapezius and neck.
On 9-18-98 I tried one sample Rolfing treatment at the
recommendation of a swimming acquaintance. The Rolfer told me I held
my R shoulder too high, so he proceeded to work in the R upper
quadrant of my body.
He pressed deeply into my paraspinal muscles and rhomboids on the
right side. This caused sharp nerve pain next to the R scapula. He
pressed hard and painfully under my R armpit between all ribs there.
He said he was "turning ribs." He pressed hard under my R collarbone
with his fingers. My R arm went numb down into my last two fingers of
my R hand. When I complained, he stated he was just "overstretching a
nerve." His final manipulation was a hard, abrupt yank of my head. I
screamed out in pain.
Later that evening I got a bad headache in the back of my head. The
next morning my shoulder blade was hanging from my body, and my R arm
kept going numb as it did on the Rolfer’s table.
The injury resulted in eight months of R scapula and shoulder pain, a
mildly "winged R scapula," and inflamed muscles. I could no longer
swim and had trouble using my R arm.
5/99: Re-injury
My R scapula improved for three days after a gentle spinal massage by a
physical therapist. She clicked my spine gently into place while I lay
prone. I felt greatly improved. Then three days later I yawned and stretched on the floor, while lying supine with my R
arm abducted near my ear. As I was stretching, my R scapula tore away
from my body at the bottom and I could feel a fiber detach.
My scapula lost stability and felt "out of place." I had severe
pain the next day which included numbness, pain and pressure in my
thoracic spine and around my R scapula. Later an MRI of the thoracic
spine revealed a herniated disk at level T6-7. In hindsight and
through consults with physicians it is believed I re-injured my long
thoracic nerve and overstretched my serratus anterior muscle and more.
My scapula drooped and was unstable, and protruded at the inferior
angle. I could not strengthen my shoulder for a long time and had to
give up driving my stickshift car.
Surgeries
5/2000: Surgery in Houston, Texas to release the long thoracic
nerve and R front neck.
In the report the MD states he dissected the
long thoracic nerve out of my middle scalene and removed scar tissue
from my brachial plexus. Surgery caused complications which included a large seroma
in my neck which lasted for months as well as marked weakness in both
of my arms which
gradually improved some. I still had scalar instability and mild
prominence at the inferior angle. I had trouble swallowing pills
because my omohyoid muscle was cut during surgery. I had voice loss
off and on and eventually marked difficulty turning my neck and
chronic pain and weakness down my R arm. I have intermittent problems
walking on my left leg.
(I chose to do surgery after 18 months of conservative
rehabilitation which did not improve the overall scapula
function. Also I could not return to my previously active lifestyle or
any sports.)
6/2001: Second Surgery - MD in Dallas, Texas to
release scar tissue in my neck and nerves.
The surgeon states he resected my middle scalene and sutured in and vascularized a fat pad
to cover my long thoracic nerve. He also removed scar tissue from my
brachial plexus. (In both surgeries the first rib was never removed.)
Results: immediately following surgery my R arm and scapula felt
great. For 36 hours my R scapula held firm to my back and my R arm
felt normal again. (Though I must admit my neck felt very taxed.) I
was given no post-op instructions so when I returned home to my
friends in Dallas my arm felt so normal that I reached for a hanger in
the closet without thinking. When I brought my arm down my R scapula
felt caught, then later became droopy and unstable. It was worse than
before any surgery at all and my trapezius became depressed as well.
Later my neck pulled really tight and my platysma scarred down
asymmetrically.
Eventually I was able to rehab and build up the muscles in both
arms and back by swimming under water in the therapy pool from April
2002 till August. This also improved the pain I had in my thoracic
spine. However, on land my arms were weak, R more than L.
Botox Treatment
8/2002: A neurologist diagnosed Thoracic Outlet Syndrome and
thought Botox might help with my tight neck in the right front region
but too many muscles were Botoxed including my R trapezius muscle. The
next day my scapula dropped still lower than before and soon became
completely unstable. I developed bone crushing pain down my entire
right arm. My R arm lost all strength (grip strength, wrist
flexion / extension, and more.) My entire shoulder and collar bone
dropped. I developed swallowing problems and intermittent sleep apnea.
My Botoxed muscles became rigor mortis-like. I had transient severe
laxity and rigidity of all Botoxed muscles that still today causes
severe problems. My trapezius muscle drooped more than ever before. I
developed intermittent severe spasticity in my front neck muscles
which spread to the left side of my neck. My neck and head became
tethered to my right rib cage by these tight scarred inflamed Botoxed
muscles.
Thoracic Outlet Surgery
3/2004: surgery performed
My third and last surgery on 3-25-04, was a Thoracic Outlet
Surgery (TOS). The purpose of the surgery, as I understood it, was to untether my neck from the rib cage where the muscles had become
scarred and tight following the Botox injections in August 2002. I had
also hoped by releasing the long thoracic nerve from my tight scalene
muscle that my shoulder blade would become stronger.
Before the surgery, I understood that the first rib would only be
removed if it was absolutely necessary for vascular reasons. However,
according to a prior Doppler of my right arm, I had no vascular
blockage or impingement.
The TOS surgery was brutal and caused devastating results. The
surgeon made two horizontal incisions on my right and center chest, one
along the old incision of the collar bone and a second two and a half
inch horizontal incision about two inches below the first. From this
approach and according to the surgery report, he completely cut out my
anterior scalene muscle, most of the middle scalene muscle, and most of
the posterior scalene muscle. He also removed the entire first rib from
front to back.
During the surgery, my phrenic nerve was damaged or cut because my
right diaphragm is still paralyzed (see photo).
Today at eleven months post-op, my right shoulder blade is more
prominent, loose and lower than prior to surgery. I am in constant and
often severe pain. I am now more tethered by tight scar tissue in my
neck than before surgery despite the surgeon telling me he used an
anti-scarring agent. I have a large sinking depression in my right neck. My physical therapist says that he
can no longer help me despite ongoing therapy for one year.
What concerns me most is I have no team
of knowledgeable specialists to assess me and see me on an ongoing
basis, nor any viable treatment plan that might stop my deterioration.
I wonder whether surgically or otherwise
stabilizing my hanging shoulder blade might stop the tight downward
pulling and atrophy of my neck? I welcome any help or ideas. I can be
best reached by phone (707) 538-6011.
Thank you for reading my website.