Dr. Mayo sent me to a dermatologist to check on my dermatitis just in case. He prescribed the same treatment as Dr. Mayo--topical steroid cream a couple of times a day. I continued to do that and the dermatitis has finally cleared up.
Last week I had a follow-up appointment with Dr. Mayo. He's satisfied that my skin has cleared up enough to take the next step toward getting the ectopic bone out. He checked my range of motion: it's still around 50˚ flexion, 5-10˚ internal rotation. He doesn't see a point in continuing to see a physical therapist at this point until he cleans that ectopic bone out.
The next step is another CT scan to map out the ectopic bone, a month from now. I'll also have a consultation with the radiation therapy folks regarding the single, low-dose of radiation they'll give me at my next surgery. Then I meet with Dr. Mayo to see what the CT shows. Thankfully, all those appointments are scheduled for the same day.
Then a month or so after that--likely sometime in April--Dr. Mayo will go back in and remove the ectopic bone and most of the screws. I have nine screws in my right hip, and seven suture anchors. The anchors stay, but I think he can remove as many as five screws through the PAO incision; two will be replaced as he'll need them to secure a chunk of bone that he needs to remove and replace again. If he needs to reopen the SDH incision to get all the ectopic bone then he'll remove the two screws in my trochanter. So best case I end up with two screws remaining.
Keri located some more x-rays (intra-op from the PAO), but we have yet to find the digital photos for the SDH. Evidently the machine that handles those doesn't talk to Multicare's network, so a radiology person has to upload them manually. She's doing her best to track them down. I'm very curious to see them.
My hip feels pretty good, considering. The joint doesn't hurt, just the tight muscles, and of course my range of motion continues to be limited. I still can't drive comfortably. But some things that hurt before surgery don't hurt now, and my hip no longer aches when I lie in bed at night. It really is amazing to think that the body can sustain such trauma and heal so well. Of course it helps that the trauma was intentional and therapeutic.
I can't say enough good about Dr. Mayo. I'm very grateful to have such a capable, conscientious hip virtuoso working on my hip.