Seeing BPI specialist is KEY: think about KKI in Baltimore
Posted: Sat Jan 21, 2012 7:32 pm
Inspired by many of the stories I have read on this website, I decided to see a BPI team in near my home at the Kennedy Krieger Institute in Baltimore, Maryland. My intent was to get hooked up with the OT/PT that this facility had to offer and that is exactly what happened.
I have met the most amazing OT's who I have seen for the past 8 weeks and I have gained 15-20 degrees of mobility in my affected shoulder: extension and abduction. They have now offered me pool therapy and electrostim (though due to my tendon transer at age 6 when they applyt his to my L shoulder I feel the sensation in my L abdomen which is kind of funny....)
I am so pleased on so many levels and am learning more every week.
I am a physician and I NEVER knew what a difference seeing therapists trained to work with BPI's could make: it DOES make a HUGE difference!
The exercising I am doing now is because I want to not b/c my mother is making me. THis is not to make moms feel bad but to say that this is a lifelong injury and that when the affected person starts to take care of it, the therapy changes (my injury was largely ignored and the elephant in the room so it is only in my adulthood that i have been brave enough to seek care for it). I cannot imaging doing the types of therapy that I am doing now as a child and I talk to my OT's about this (b/c I am a pediatrician and work with kids, obvioiusly) and they confirm that the therapy changes as kids mature. I wish that I had been given the message that "this part of you deserves care too" But I was not, so some overcoming of shame had to happen also. I think the best thing parents can do for kids is to help avoid shame, make this a part of their lives but not to overly dwell on it and LET THEM OWN IT so that someday, they will have the tools and the presence to know what to do to take care of themselves.
I have been successful in life and people don't usually see my injury everyday b/c in my day job, they don't notice my arms are different lengths and that I can't supinate or raise my arm above my head b/c they do not see me struggle: I have so many compensating maneuvers.... But, my unaffected side has taken its toll and that is part of the motivation for me seeking this care. The surprising thing is that even so, with specialty therapists and my motivation, there is so much that can still be done to help me. This is above and beyond what my local PT could do for me and she was really good. The people who "think" this injury are really amazing. What a surprise that there is more improvement that I can make. My elbow will always be contracted and my arms will never be the same length but the tightness and the muscle pain and strain and ROM can be better.
So this is a plug for people to be seen by BPI specialists. Even as a medical professional I did not realize how key this was until I learned about this UBPN website. And I will put in a plug for the Kennedy Krieger Institute: check them out on line. the Team that I saw at my appointment were all great (except I thought the ortho guy was a bit of a gruff toad...but my resources tell me this is his personality and not personal). Really liked the rehab doc.
Sara
I have met the most amazing OT's who I have seen for the past 8 weeks and I have gained 15-20 degrees of mobility in my affected shoulder: extension and abduction. They have now offered me pool therapy and electrostim (though due to my tendon transer at age 6 when they applyt his to my L shoulder I feel the sensation in my L abdomen which is kind of funny....)
I am so pleased on so many levels and am learning more every week.
I am a physician and I NEVER knew what a difference seeing therapists trained to work with BPI's could make: it DOES make a HUGE difference!
The exercising I am doing now is because I want to not b/c my mother is making me. THis is not to make moms feel bad but to say that this is a lifelong injury and that when the affected person starts to take care of it, the therapy changes (my injury was largely ignored and the elephant in the room so it is only in my adulthood that i have been brave enough to seek care for it). I cannot imaging doing the types of therapy that I am doing now as a child and I talk to my OT's about this (b/c I am a pediatrician and work with kids, obvioiusly) and they confirm that the therapy changes as kids mature. I wish that I had been given the message that "this part of you deserves care too" But I was not, so some overcoming of shame had to happen also. I think the best thing parents can do for kids is to help avoid shame, make this a part of their lives but not to overly dwell on it and LET THEM OWN IT so that someday, they will have the tools and the presence to know what to do to take care of themselves.
I have been successful in life and people don't usually see my injury everyday b/c in my day job, they don't notice my arms are different lengths and that I can't supinate or raise my arm above my head b/c they do not see me struggle: I have so many compensating maneuvers.... But, my unaffected side has taken its toll and that is part of the motivation for me seeking this care. The surprising thing is that even so, with specialty therapists and my motivation, there is so much that can still be done to help me. This is above and beyond what my local PT could do for me and she was really good. The people who "think" this injury are really amazing. What a surprise that there is more improvement that I can make. My elbow will always be contracted and my arms will never be the same length but the tightness and the muscle pain and strain and ROM can be better.
So this is a plug for people to be seen by BPI specialists. Even as a medical professional I did not realize how key this was until I learned about this UBPN website. And I will put in a plug for the Kennedy Krieger Institute: check them out on line. the Team that I saw at my appointment were all great (except I thought the ortho guy was a bit of a gruff toad...but my resources tell me this is his personality and not personal). Really liked the rehab doc.
Sara