Limb Amputations
Limb Amputations

How can I be a nurse in the millitary without actually joing the milliatry?
I want to become a rehabilitation nurse specialising in amputations (eg. people who have lost limbs through wars etc). How do I go about working with the defence force but not actually joing the millitary? Would I be contracted? I live in Australia so it could be done differently to over in the US
I'm not a nurse but I'm looking for university courses to start but I'm not sure if i just do a bachelor of Nursing or if I have to take a special course...
I am certain that there are specific hospitals/rehab centers that are set up just for military personnel, In the US, even the Veterans Hospitals are NOT STAFFED by military people. They are staffed by ordinary citizens that are qualified for the posit ions.
Amputation
Losing a limb is one of the most traumatic events a person can experience, affecting you not only physically, but also emotionally and financially.
Unfortunately, approximately 1.7 million people in the U.S. are living with the aftermath of an amputation, and about 185,000 new amputations are performed there annually.
Types of Amputation
There are basically four categories of amputations:
- Dysvascular-Related Amputations. These are amputations due to vascular disease, i.e., problems with blood flow to the limbs. More than 80 percent of all limb removals in the U.S. are dysvascular-related amputations.
- Cancer-Related Amputations. Obviously, these are amputations that occur as a result of cancer in some part of the body.
- Congenital-Related Amputations. These are caused by severe congenital problems with a limb at birth. (In some cases, congenital-related amputations can be related to medical malpractice.)
- Trauma-Related Amputations. These are amputations caused by some sort of extreme trauma to the body.
Common Causes of Traumatic-Related Amputations
Amputation injuries can be the result of accidents such as:
- Automobile accidents
- Truck accidents
- Motorcycle accidents
- Construction accidents
Trauma-Related Amputation Statistics
According to the Amputee Coalition of America:
- Nearly 70 percent of amputations of the upper limbs are due to trauma-related injuries.
- The risk of having a limb amputated for traumatic reasons, as well as dysvascular-related reasons, increases with age.
- Men are at a higher risk for traumatic-related limb removal.
Care after an Amputation
The general health and strength of a person who has undergone an amputation are the driving factors in determining how much care he/she will need after the loss of limb. There may be prosthetic fittings, rehabilitation, physical and occupational training, psychological counseling, and professional assistance with mobility and driving.
Amputation Injury Compensation
If a person’s loss of limb is the fault of another individual or entity, that person may be able to sue for financial compensation that can help with mounting medical bills and other amputation-related costs. Prosthetic devices alone can cost $70,000 or more and must be replaced at regular intervals.
If someone else’s negligence or wrongdoing caused your amputation, an experienced amputation injury lawyer may help you receive monetary damages for:
- Medical expenses
- Prosthetics
- Long-term care
- Lost income
- Reduced quality of life
- Emotional pain
- Loss of companionship
![]() Atlas of Amputations and Limb Deficiencies Sale Price: $279.00 Eligible for free shipping!Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours See Reviews For This Product DescriptionThe Atlas of Amputations, Third Edition, remains the definitive and comprehensive reference on the surgical and prosthetic management of acquired and congenital limb loss. This expanded and updated edition is written by recognized experts in the fields of amputation surgery, rehabilitation and prosthetics, covering all aspects from from history, to specific anatomic regions, to unique management concerns. It is well organized by anatomic structure with a special section on the pediatric population, which presents unique challenges. The most impressive aspect of this book is the extensive presentation of the various facets of this topic. The ease of navigating through the text and the up-to-date concepts make it a perfect reference text. For the generalist or occasional practitioner, this text would be a worthy reference in the medical library. |
![]() A History of Limb Amputation List Price: Sale Price: $170.07 You save: $14.93 (8%) Eligible for free shipping!Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours See Reviews For This Product DescriptionThis book opens with a unique historical review of natural amputations due to congenital absence, disease, frostbite, animal trauma, and to punishment and ritual. The advent of surgical amputation and its difficulties form a major part of the book, summarising the evolution of the control of haemorrhage and infection, pain relief, techniques, instrumentation, complications, prostheses, results and case histories. Alternative procedures, increasingly important in the last two centuries, are also debated. |
![]() A Primer on Amputations and Artificial Limbs Sale Price: $304.24 See Reviews For This Product |
![]() Lower Limb Amputation: A Guide to Living a Quality Life List Price: Sale Price: $13.57 You save: $6.38 (32%) Eligible for free shipping!Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours See Reviews For This Product DescriptionThis is the first book to combine medical, prosthetic, and psychosocial facts about lower limb amputation into one convenient volume. The author demystifies the medical process by using plain, optimistic language and offers practical advice about how to cope with the life changes caused by lower limb amputation. Due to diabetes and an aging population, among other factors, lower limb amputation is now relatively common. Feelings of loss and grief, difficulties in learning to walk with an artificial limb, and readjustment to an interrupted life all pose considerable challenges - but countless people have successfully overcome these problems. Includes: * ways to prevent further amputation * learning to walk with a prosthesis * challenges faced by children and elderly people Well-informed, knowledgeable individuals with amputations are better able to take care of themselves and are more effective self-advocates. Here are the tools for a productive, satisfying, and high-quality life. Features
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![]() Living with a Below-Knee Amputation: A Unique Insight from a Prosthetist/Amputee List Price: Sale Price: $34.15 You save: $5.80 (15%) Eligible for free shipping!Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours See Reviews For This Product DescriptionLiving with a Below-Knee Amputation: A Unique Insight from a Prosthetist/Amputee provides an insightful look at the entire spectrum of the below knee experience from amputation to rehabilitation. As a prosthetist for 22 years, author Richard Riley uses real life examples to answer many of the questions facing amputees. The information is structured in a manner that permits quick, easy access to an array of topics. Living with a Below-Knee Amputation not only discusses the psychosocial and physical issues; it also clearly explains the role of the medical professional and the complexities of constructing a prosthetic device during each phase of rehabilitation. Images are also included to display all of the available options and components of an artificial leg. Some topics inside Living with a Below-Knee Amputation include amputation surgery, pain, postoperative care, therapy, purpose and design, fittings, maintenance and hygiene, integration of the prosthesis, child amputees, and recreation and sports. The unique perspective used by the author helps physical therapists, occupational therapists, physicians, orthopedic surgeons, and rehabilitation professionals better identify and relate to their patients. By understanding the amputee’s emotions and expectations, the professional can cohesively work together with their patients to identify ways for reintegration into their lifestyle. Features
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![]() Amputation, Prosthesis Use, and Phantom Limb Pain: An Interdisciplinary Perspective List Price: Sale Price: $128.35 You save: $0.65 (1%) Eligible for free shipping!Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours See Reviews For This Product DescriptionThe book will contain contributions from the fields of anthropology, biomedical engineering, computer science, neuroscience, nursing, prosthetics and orthotics, psychology, and rehabilitative medicine. It will be comprised of three broad interrelated sections. Following an introductory chapter in which the topics and chapters of the book are overviewed, the first section ("Providing and Monitoring the Use of Prostheses") will concentrate on the work of prostheticians and will consist of three chapters. The first of these, written by a clinician responsible for the provision of prosthetics in a large regional area of the UK, will present a range of ethical and medico-legal issues for rehabilitation professionals in the supply and withdrawal of prostheses and assistive technology for people with limb loss or deformity. The second chapter, provided by a prosthetician and prosthetic engineers, will present the development of an innovative computerized technique for monitoring upper limb prosthesis activity. The final chapter in this section is written by an anthropologist, himself an amputee, presenting ethnographic work on how prostheticians and their clients actually "go about" providing artificial limbs. Together these chapters explicate the processes involved in prostheticians’ work with clients in a manner which will be of interest to students and professionals from a range of disciplines. Section 2 ("The Experience and Meaning of Prosthesis Use") focuses on the experiences and meanings of prosthesis users themselves. The first of three chapters, written by members of the Dublin Psychoprothetics Group, explores the ways in which people adapt and cope with limb loss and using a prosthesis, the potential for positive adjustment and strengths emerging from the experience, pain, affective distress, issues around identity, body image, and the construction of self and quality of life. It also considers the importance of these issues for health service providers across the multidisciplinary team who work with people with limb loss. The second chapter provides a reflective critique of the themes in the book, namely, the process of prosthetic rehabilitation, by way of a reprint of Gelya Frank’s classic paper "Beyond Stigma: Visibility and Self-Empowerment of Persons with Congenital Limb Deficiencies," along with a new commentary from the author herself. This chapter focuses on the experiences of people born with congenital limb deficiencies who have chosen not to use prosthetics as part of a strategy to counteract the stigmatization of disability and bodily difference. The views of these participants provide challenges to a range of professionals involved in the rehabilitation of people with amputations and limb deficiencies. The final chapter of this section presents a range of themes in the experiences of people who choose to use prosthetics following amputation or limb absence, including the embodied used of prosthesis and the integration of these into the identity of the persons concerned. The final section (postoperative pain and new treatments of phantom limb pain) focuses on phantom limb pain and emerging therapies for this phenomenon. The first of four chapters presents a clinician’s account of post amputation pain, stressing how this is temporally dependent, varying at different stages of the perioperative/postoperative period, with possibly more than one pain being present at any time. In considering the complex amalgam of pain contributors the author argues for a full biopsychosocial assessment to be made with attention and treatment given to any associated mood disorder, disorder of cognition or behavioral maladaptations. These considerations are developed further in the following chapter where, written from a nursing perspective, the coping style of patients in relation to phantom limb pain are discussed and compared with other pain conditions. The final two chapters in this section present two emerging therapies for phantom limb pain which have received particular academic and media attention. This condition is notoriously difficult to treat, and the two chapters included here present the emergence of exciting new therapies. The first of these, written from a neuropsychological and nursing perspective, discusses the potential of mental imagery in the treatment of phantom limb pain and associated cortical reorganization in the brain. The authors report on a mental imagery training program for patients, based at the Pain Research Institute in Liverpool. Patients with phantom limb pain have reported a significant reduction in the intensity and unpleasantness of constant pain and exacerbations. The last chapter presents the emergence of virtual reality therapy, involving the collaboration of psychologists and computer scientists, and focuses principally on the work of the Advanced Interface Group at Manchester using immersive virtual reality as a visual therapy for the treatment of phantom limb pain. |
![]() Amputations and Prosthetics: A Case Study Approach List Price: Sale Price: $8.53 See Reviews For This Product DescriptionA. Davis. Medial College of Georgia, Augusta. Text on the basic concepts of working with amputees, for physical therapy students. Discusses planning and implementing treatment programs for post-amputation clients. Presents case-study examples. Softcover. 2 U.S. contributors. DNLM: Amputation - rehabilitation. |
![]() Who Is Amelia?: Caring for Children With Limb Difference Sale Price: $35.00 Eligible for free shipping!Availability: Usually ships in 4 to 6 weeks See Reviews For This Product |
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May 12, 2010 | Posted by admin 
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