View Single Post
Old 01-24-2012, 12:50 AM
winic1 winic1 is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 295
10 yr Member
winic1 winic1 is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 295
10 yr Member
Default How do you stop scar tissue from forming?

I have scar tissue restricting both subclavian artery and vein, especially when I move my arm the wrong way (which is gradually becoming most ways). This came as a result of a broken collarbone (car accident) that did not heal and so was fixed with plate and screws 3-1/2 months after the accident. Few months later I noticed my arm/hand going off-color, and it has been downhill from there, now more than 2 years from the accident.

I make keloid scars like crazy. Inside and out. You should have seen the monstrosity my first c-section turned into--take a #2 pencil, color it that angry red color unhappy scars are, and glue it to your stomach. 2nd c-section, they spent 45 minutes cleaning up the internal scarring from the 1st.

On advise of a vascular surgeon, who said he would NOT recommend surgery because of significant risk to artery, vein, nerves, use of my arm, etc (said, scar tissue is tougher than healthy tissue, so if you tug on it, guess which rips first?). Recommended physical therapy to loosen and remodel things in there.

Got a great pt who has been trying gentle techniques to release things in there, but not making much progress, in fact she says, and I would agree, that I am still making new scar tissue inside there. (Outside scar continues to grow back despite 3 rounds of steroid injections by dermatologist.)

So...anyone know how to make internal scarring to stop?

If it does come to surgery (either repair or bypass the problem), how do I keep the scarring problem from coming back?

doctors in my little podunk corner of the universe are all clueless (even about TOS. even about most everything.)

I have vision problems, made worse and complicated by vertebro-basilar insufficiency from this TOS problem, so internet searching has become nearly impossible for me, especially technical documents, reading is now giving me migraines after a very very short time, so I cannot seem to find any clues to my problem myself. (put myself through college typing, so fingers still work, even if I have trouble reading it once I spit it all out.)

Or figure out where to go next, I am within range of New York City, Connecticut, and even Boston, but no longer drive and can't travel (train or bus) by myself, so I need to know the right place to go, I can't keep trying new places/doctors hoping to hit the right one.

Does anyone know anything on this problem?
winic1 is offline   Reply With QuoteReply With Quote