Thanks. Never really considered othe options as disk was dead and deteriorating. I am stubborn with my body and don't really see that changing. For instance when I setup my 240 3/4 startfire I moved it across the basement and lifted and mounted it on the 40" stand by my lonesome.
The surgery was by all counts successful. The vascular doc who did the opening and closing joked in the OR that the Ortho was going to be the " rockstar" as the general surgeon had to do all the hard work. He told me before I was "deep" not fat, a kind of weird compliment at the time. Anyhow, there was a lot of pulling and stretching of muscle and actually some internal unanticipated cuts made to create access. The recovery was said to be more difficult as a result. The good news was access to the disc space was great, and the ortho got a great tight fit with the cage with no compromises made. Total time from entry and to normal hospital room was like 5 hours and I basically recall little of it.
Was out of bed walking the first night. Absolutely zero back pain.....transition out of bed and getting going hardest part. My pain was from entry site as advertised. Took out catheter early on wed. That was too early, and then got all backed up and had to do an in and out again to get relief. That was not pleasant, plus the nurse didn't have something on right and well, a quick warm shower was had by the both of us. A day later something that rhymes like " rock " was discovered looking like a distorted beer can and after discharge Friday required a quick trip to the ED. I read something about a human version of RTN and wanted no part of it.
Day 5 now and I have assorted pain and really trying to avoid the narcotics. They really push them on you at the hospital and then drop you off to very low dose afterwards. It's funny listening to a roommate always saying "8" for pain, with almost the same tone of voice he would order a Boston creme donut.
I have already traveled maybe a quarter mile around the block. My big issue is I have gout, and wouldn't you know it surgery and stress is a trigger for a gout break through event. New flare location in left foot, the side where the cut was made. I have a med that I can usually take that beats down a flare, but that is heavily discouraged as it inhibits new bone grown with the fusion. So the irony now is 80 percent of the pain is from the gout rather than the surgery, and walking is an essential activity. Time to just test my metal and power through it. And there always more personally painful activities, like doing water tests!