The Shoulder
The Shoulder
50
Recovery & winspatient-heron-453

Thought I was finally healed — now doctors are finding something they can't explain in my ankle

I don't even know how to start this other than I just need to get it out somewhere.

Back in the spring I got rear-ended pretty hard on the highway. Walked away feeling lucky — fractured my ankle but nothing life-threatening. Spent months doing physical therapy, hobbling around in a boot, doing all the right things. Finally got cleared to go back to my job in food service management, which keeps me on my feet basically all shift.

Fast forward to last week. I went in for what I thought was just a routine follow-up X-ray and my orthopedic doc got really quiet. Apparently there's some kind of bone tissue change happening in a part of my ankle that wasn't even the original fracture site. She's already looped in two other specialists and I'm scheduled for an MRI and a bone scan. Nobody is saying the word "why" with any confidence.

The worst part? I had just started rebuilding my life. I was picking up extra shifts to catch up on bills that piled up during recovery. My lease renewal is coming up and I honestly don't know if I can afford to re-sign if I have to stop working again. I had plans. I was almost back to normal.

I'm not even asking for answers here because clearly even the doctors don't have them yet. I'm just so angry and scared and exhausted. Has anyone else had a complication pop up months after their accident that blindsided them? How did you cope with the financial spiral while waiting for answers? Because right now I'm just white-knuckling it.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 20
    daring-kestrel-482

    Oh man, this hit close to home. I had a hairline fracture in my foot from my accident and thought I was done with it after a few months. Then out of nowhere I started getting these intense aching episodes and it turned out I'd developed a circulation issue in the area. The delayed complications nobody warns you about are genuinely the hardest part — you're finally breathing again and then the floor drops out. You're not alone in this.

    • 8
      kind-driver156

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 22
    cool-crow-763

    Without knowing your specific imaging I obviously can't say anything clinical, but what you're describing — bone changes appearing at a non-fracture site after trauma — is something doctors do see, even if it's not common. Sometimes the impact causes stress to surrounding structures that doesn't show up right away. The fact that your doctor is already escalating and ordering more imaging is actually the right move, even though I know the waiting is brutal. Keep a symptom journal with dates and severity. It sounds small but it genuinely helps your care team and, honestly, any other process you might need to go through later.

    • 10
      honest-parent998

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 15
    humble-lynx-499

    Please, please do not settle anything with the at-fault driver's insurance until you have actual answers from your doctors. I can't stress this enough. Adjusters will often push for a quick resolution right around the time you think you're "healed" — and once you sign that release, any new complications are 100% on you. Don't let them hurry you.

    • 19
      steady-elk-801

      Former adjuster here and I'll be straight with you: the file on your claim probably already has a target settlement range built around your original diagnosis. If your medical picture is now materially different — and what you're describing sounds like it could be — that changes the calculus significantly. Document every single appointment, every specialist referral, every day you can't work. That paper trail matters more than most people realize.

    • 9
      kind-dreamer426

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

    • 5
      restless-backseat251

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 12
    swift-seal-339

    Not legal advice, but this is exactly the kind of situation where having an attorney review your claim sooner rather than later makes sense. Delayed or evolving injuries complicate cases but they don't kill them — courts understand that not everything shows up on day one. Just make sure you're not on a ticking clock with any deadlines in your state. Statutes of limitations are real. Worth a free consult at minimum.

  • 6
    kind-tern-532

    I'm so sorry. You did everything right — you followed the treatment plan, you were patient, you worked to get back on your feet — and now this. That's genuinely unfair and it makes sense that you're angry. I hope you have some people around you right now. Please don't try to carry all of this alone.

    • 4
      gentle-rider566

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 7
    bold-crow-884

    Two practical things: First, call your doctor's billing department and ask about hardship deferrals before your bills go to collections — most hospital systems have them and don't advertise it. Second, if you haven't already, file for any short-term disability you might have through your employer. Even part-time workers sometimes qualify. Don't wait on either of those.

  • 19
    spry-owl-760

    Not doubting your experience at all, but I'm curious — did you ever get a second opinion on the original fracture diagnosis and treatment? Sometimes complications like this trace back to something being missed or undertreated early on, which is a separate issue from the accident itself. Might be worth asking your new specialists to look at the full imaging history from the beginning.

    • 7
      steady-rider659

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?