Partially torn triceps tendon

Roofer1

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 13, 2019
Messages
240
Location
WI
Well... with all the foolish things I do what got me was falling in my garage. Have a partially torn triceps lateral head tendon. Met the surgeon a couple days ago. He's a friend of mine so I trust what he says but wanted to throw out the intel to see it anyone else has dealt with this, and what their opinion was. Scheduled surgery for Feb. 6th but am supposed to talk to the surgeon a week prior regarding how it feels. He said if it's healing then we'd just cancel the surgery. He told me that is truly on the borderline whether surgery was necessary or not. Has anyone had the surgery? Results? Has anyone been in a similar situation and not had the surgery? Results? Thanks
 

7mm-08

WKR
Joined
Oct 31, 2016
Messages
892
Location
Idaho
Sorry that I know virtually nothing about your injury, but anytime somebody wants to get out a scalpel, I pause my consent for a LONG, LONG time. If you're saying that the tear can/will heal itself, what are the downsides of waiting and evaluating nature's progress without the risks of general anesthesia, an unpredictable outcome, etc.? Remember, carpenters drive nails.
 
Joined
May 15, 2021
Messages
308
Location
Far northwestern Komifornia
A few months ago I tore the tenons in my bicep that control the twisting motion ( turning a screwdriver ), Doc says if you don't mind a lump in your arm, don't sweat it. It'll heal up and I'll get 98% strength back after a fashion.
 
OP
R

Roofer1

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 13, 2019
Messages
240
Location
WI
I'm really not fired up for surgery in any form so I like/agree with what both of you have said.
 
Joined
Nov 14, 2020
Messages
1,235
Different injury. May be applicable experience.

I tore my right lower bicep tendon completely off the mooring point. My bicep looked like a baseball under my skin. The concern was getting it reattached before the muscle/tendon group shrank. If it had shrunk too much it would make reattacment difficult to impossible. In the month before my surgery I was able to still play the guitar. Lots of up and down movement of the right fore arm despite not having a useful bicep on that arm. They told me I would lose about 20% IIRC of the lifting strength in my right arm without the surgery. Surgery involved a stainless pin and sewing the tendon to the bone?

Recovery was six weeks in a cast and a couple years of using the arm but no throwing anything. Almost completely forgot about it nowadays 12 years later.

I would ask your guy about the prognosis if it fails to heal naturally.
 

bigv

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Nov 28, 2018
Messages
197
Location
south dakota
My bicep tendon tore off my shoulder. I have a bump in arm now and elected not to fix it. Dr said it will heal completely with normal strength in 8-10 months. Will still have bump though. Same thing as Brett Favre and Peyton Manning he said. Not triceps though but I suspect similar???
 
Joined
Mar 13, 2017
Messages
1,141
Location
Chico, California
i blew out my shoulder cleaning my pool this year. just slipped...if I had gone to the left I would have landed in my pool... no big deal but no, I fell to the right and braced myself with my elbow and blew out everything, rotator cuff, labrum, messed up bicep. Im 8 weeks out from surgery now and just barely getting to the point my arm has some range of motion again. Hilarious thing is three weeks before i was glassing a hillside and slipped, fell 30 feet down a steep incline, took a header or two and walked away without a scratch.... but no.. cleaning my pool and falling 3 feet and boom
 
Joined
May 13, 2015
Messages
3,971
Once you have a complete tear, the muscle is only connected on one side, and no longer functions. As such it begins to atrophy and it shrinks. You have a limited amount of time to fix it, surgically to regain function and strength. If you wait too long, the only option you have is connecting what is referred to as a baloon to the torn tendon and bone. This might increase function/movement, but it does not address strength. If you feel you can live with it the it is, strength and function/movement will not improve, then go with doing nothing. If you want improvement, do not delay surgery.
 
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