What to Expect From a Broken Clavicle

The following is a funny story sent to me by a rider that broke her collar bone while cycling. She found my site when searching for more information on training and recovery from the break.

Along with the story she mentions “I know it would’ve helped me alot if this information had been available when I was lost in the land of one arm. I have attached my ridiculously long account”. She then adds that I may post the story if I wish.

Well, I think it’s well worth posting. So here it is.

Enjoy.

DISCLAIMER: The following content is for informational purposes only. The content is not intended as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Diagnosis and treatment of all health conditions should only be performed by your doctor or other licensed health care professional. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this site.

What to Expect From a Broken Clavicle

By Laura Erker

On March 23rd I had the exciting experience of breaking my left clavicle while riding my bike. I thought I’d put together a synopsis of what to expect so that anyone else can read and see what’s in store. If you’re reading this and you have broken you clavicle then get someone to run out to the store and get you some really good calcium. You should take 2000mg of calcium with 6mg of Boron a day! While they’re at it, have them pick you about four books to read and ten movies to go through. Further, a really funny account of the first five days with a broken clavicle can be found on line http://www.kurlancheek.com/clavicle.htm. Also, relax, it’s gonna be a while.

So, what happened? Good question, everyone has their own version of who is to blame and how it all went down. From my vantage point I only know that I was cruising along in a group, riding into a crosswind. Someone had the bright idea to put it in the gutter and everyone started fighting for wheels. Then, I heard some tires hit and “…zzt zzzt zzt crack crack crack”. The bike in front of me came to a screeching halt and as I hit my brakes I went into a skid that had my back wheel hit the back tire in front of me. Next thing I knew I was picking myself up off the ground and getting back on my bike. But, as I rode away I realized that something was very wrong. Not only was my left shoulder ON FIRE with pain but I could feel/hear a clicking there that could only be a broken bone. Deciding that I was not stupid enough to try to ride the remaining 25 miles with a broken bone I attempted to bring myself to a stop and threw my bike in the dirt glad to be rid of that infernal pain machine. The pain was so intense now that fainting was the only possibility. But, I had to wait to lose all consciousness until I could hail down an ambulance, cab, person! I could see a group of cars a mile away down the road at the site of the crash, where I should have stayed. Well, hindsight is always 20/20. I hailed the ambulance like a cab and crawled in just in time to faint. I was then transferred to another ambulance and so began my new adventure into a one-armed existence.

The emergency room was exciting and the staff was very generous. All in all, a three hour affair in the door and out. It ends up I broke the distal third of my collar bone. However, getting a hold of someone to pick me up became a new challenge. I didn’t have my cell phone with me and not knowing any phone numbers I had to go on the internet to get the number of my team director, Chris Evertsen. Chris or an official was able to relate to my husband where I was located and he headed off to get me. After sitting in the emergency entrance for hours, seeing my husband come through the door of the emergency room was one of the happiest moments of my life!

Week 1 (This is movie week)

One quickly learns that it is a two-armed world out there and this will not make your broken clavicled life any easier. But, on with life.

Killing the pain. First, let’s discuss the power of alchohol. Through the ages this fine substance has been used to dull the pain of many a fallen soldier. Seeing myself as such, I broke into the whiskey with wild abandon. Choosing Jack Daniels’ as my personal “fav’ I set out to imbibe. If you dose this correctly you won’t have to pick up your prescription vicadin. Careful to drink a glass of water for each alcoholic drink so you avoid hangovers.

Dressing, this becomes a new adventure. You must keep your hurt shoulder extremely still. This means that the arm attached to it is completely useless. If you are a woman then forget the bra. If you must have a bra get someone you “trust’ to put your most comfortable one on and realize you will be wearing this item for at least two or three days. Unable to work out how to get a t-shirt on I tried my shirts that button up. You soon come to realize that buttons are not an option. Ok, back to regular shirts. I could get large t-shirts on by feeding the sleeve of the bad arm over my useless hand up to my armpit and then carefully pulling it over my head and then putting my functional arm in the other arm hole. Getting the t-shirt off again is usually a two-person project. Forget tying shoelaces or wearing tight pants, they become the enemy.

Sleeping. Most certainly, one must avoid, at all costs, rolling onto the affected shoulder during the first week. This will wake you up in just as much pain as the day you crashed. I found that propping pillows all along the length of my body helped to reduce unwarranted movement. I slept a lot, there wasn’t much else to do. But, this doesn’t really matter, as dressing, eating, and drinking will take about 5 times longer than usual, so I filled my day accordingly.

Book read: Foundation by Isaac Asimov
Movies watched: a lot!
Alcohol consumption: can’t accurately remember :’)

Week 2

Now I was really starting to feel better, less pain in the shoulder and I could use my hand a bit. But my shoulder turned a pallid green. The bruising is disgusting and continued to creep down my torso for another week. But, since I only owned three t-shirts that I could manage to pull over my arm and head I just continued with the same state of affairs. It was about now that I realized I only had one thing to do to entertain myself!go to work. So, off I went arm in sling. I had only two things on my “to do” list each day. These items were usually something that would normally take me about an hour. Not now, I could spend all day working on simple problems. I had to get people to open the freezers for me and handle mice etc! But I got to talk with everyone at work quite a bit :’). I’d be able to work about 6 hours maximum a day before I completely cracked. This is when I learned to value of ibuprofen! One little pill can take a cranky/pained Laura and turn her into a working machine for about 2 more hours, lovely.

Comraderie. It was now that I learned that walking around in a sling attracts a lot of attention. People have to comment. They can’t help it.

“Fall off a bar stool?”
“Boy, broken collar bone, that’s the worst!”

I quickly pointed out that being on fire would probably be worse, but ok it’s nice to know people care.

I also learned that other injured people are most certainly your friend. You have to ask them what they did, and if they have a good left arm then you always ask if you could borrow it, or something corny like this. But, it’s fun.

I also started to get on the bike at the gym around this time. According to one man, I was great inspiration working out with my sling on. Well, I’d surely give up my inspiration status to use my left arm again, buddy! I went home suddenly after some of these visits to the gym because I would try to do too much and BLAM, pain again. Don’t do sit ups.

Doctor visit. It was mid-week that I was able to go and see a doctor. I sat there for about an hour just to get a referral to an orthopedist. Once I got in to see the nurse she looked straight at me (let me remind the reader that I was wearing my left arm in a sling and was covered with a big green bruise that covered my arm and torso)!

“So, what is your problem, today?”
“I have a broken clavicle and need to be referred to an orthopedist”
“Which arm is broken?”
(again, I remind the reader that my left arm was is a sling)
“My left arm”
“Okay, and what are you doing for it?”
I point to the sling, flabbergasted.
“When did it happen?”
“One week ago” I replied.
Surprised, “And you haven’t been in to see a doctor yet?”
“Well, no, I was just starting to feel like I could venture out of my “healing cocoon’.”
“Alright, let’s get you an appointment. Right, so the soonest our orthopedist can see you will be April 22nd.”
“That’s in three weeks! I have a broken bone. Isn’t there something sooner?”
“There isn’t really anything we can do for that, do you have any ibuprofen?”

Eventually I got x-rayed and was told to come back in three weeks.

Book Read: Second Foundation, Isaac Asimov

Week 3

I felt the same as Week 2 but was able to get on the trainer with my sling. I got a workout regimen from Hans Kellner on line. Very nice guy, who broke his clavicle a while back, you can go to !

Hans Kellner Dot Com :: Broken Clavicle No More

The training regimen consists of workouts broken up by Week 1, Week 2, and Week 3. Wow, I thought, this guy was training at week 1. Well, straight onto the trainer then, let’s get to work. Ends up, “Week 1” should be approached more as “the first week he began training after the break”. Holding my entire upper body up on my bike trainer with just my right arm was another challenge I hadn’t anticipated. I pushed through it. Also, it seems it only took Hans three weeks to recover, that’s only as long as his workout regimen was. Excellent, I’ll only be on the trainer for one week! This is great. Again, it ends up the three week training regimen can be repeated ad infinitum until you heal, just a little heads up.

Pit of Despair. This probably only applies to women. I could not shave the injured arm’s pit! This was horrible and I began to refer to this area of my body as the “pit of despair”. This is when you realize the ultimate greatness of the Mach 3 razor. You can literally shave without lifting your arm! Well lift it as much as you can. Good luck girls!

Book read: Swimming Across by Andrew Grove

Week 4

Having contracted some kind of horrible cold (which I affectionately call “the snot blanket”) I was unable to sleep at night or workout. I fell into a depressive mood. Out of desperation I rode my bike on the road for one hour and ended up hurting it again. This is when I completely cracked under the strain of heading out into the world each and every day facing new painful challenges. I was tired of it. I wanted just one day where I didn’t have to struggle to get my clothes on or sleep! I felt that no one could possibly understand the pain I was going through. It was during this time that a friend and coworker died in a tragic car accident. Suddenly I found myself very appreciative of my situation. I was alive, fairly healthy and had people that loved me.

Back to riding, I found that I couldn’t reach the handlebars with my bad arm until the end of Week 4, this may be because I had a distal break, but I don’t know. I just kept focusing on my appointment with the doctor and the x-ray machine. He would certainly tell me that I was completely healed and I could resume my life again. Alas, it was not to be, the x-ray looked the same as the day I broke my arm. Well, I headed back home to cry, pulled myself together, bought a year’s supply of calcium and vowed not to drink any alcohol until I was better and healed! I hear alcohol can reduce your healing abilities. Also, when you break a bone you should take 2000mg of calcium a day with 6mg of Boron.

This was the week that I talked with Dr. Allan Richberg, also a cyclist. He informed me that seeing no healing after four weeks was normal for a 30 year old. This greatly lifted my spirits! He talked with me for a good 30 minutes on what to expect from my injury. He informed me that if you ride in the early healing stages of a broken clavicle you will most probably put a rib into your lung if you crash. This was alarming, why didn’t my doctor tell me this. Thanks Allan!

Book read: Hitch Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Doug Adams

Week 5

My arm started to feel a lot better now. I could lift it over my head! Also, I could start driving my car with two hands. This was great! I started really riding the trainer a lot and was able to just get my left hand up to the bars comfortably and put a little weight on it. I did seven hours on the trainer this week, good for me. Whoever thought I’d be riding my trainer so much in So Cal with it sunny and 80F outside!

Book read: Finished Hitch Hiker’s Guide

Week 6

I risked a ride on the road, against the doctor’s orders and found that my arm was ok. Whew!

Book read: Sequel to Hitch Hiker’s guide “Restaurant at the End of the Universe” by Doug Adams

Week 7

Now I am back to riding 3 times a week and really enjoying it. My body sure is tired though.

Book read: Finished Restaurant at the End of the Universe by Doug Adams

Week 8

I have an appointment with the doctor to get x-rayed again. Keep your fingers crossed. I am really looking forward to racing and just glued my ksyriums with the help of the best husband in the world, Jacob Erker.

Book read: Started Ringworld by Larry Niven

More “Broken Collar Bone” Articles

Don’t miss reading the information and comments in the other collar bone entries:

759 responses

  1. Pete Avatar

    ^^^^ Dude, I don’t want to be around you when you break that metal plate. Ugh.
    Pete here again. I’m just starting week 6 and haven’t had my sling on for a few days now. I actually braided my own shoulder-length hair today for work, which is a milestone. I’ve been very fortunate to have the job I do – I’m the grantwriter for the Saginaw Art Museum, so no heavy lifting, and a flexible schedule. I picked up a Micro$oft ergonomic keyboard that helped out a lot.
    I go for my next x-ray checkup this Wednesday. I can tell that it’s still not lined up properly, but it feels pretty solid. My shoulders are level, so that’s a plus.
    This blog thing is a great resource, but there’s like three alone on the Hans Keller site, it would be great if this were reorganized into a searchable message board like phpBBS. I set one up for http://www.bulldogmc.com – it was free to host and create. Just a thought.

  2. Dan Avatar
    Dan

    WOW! and I thought I was the only clumbsy one. On Nov 5 2005, I rode my Motorcycle down from Austin to Bastrop, hit gravel that was on asphalt while going about 5-10 mph. The result is that I dropped the bike and crashed into the windshield of the cycle which snapped the clavical driving one piece down to the lung area and the other top portion got wedged into the trapezia muscle in my neck. Bastrop has no ER rooms and I really didnt want the accident on my driving record. So I got a wrecker driver to upright my cruiser and headed to Austin. BTW, the wrecker dude gave me a tip on uprighting the bike cause I couldn’t lift it – turn the handle bars towards the ground which causes the front tire to lift the bike as you bump the seat with your butt.
    Thank God for helmets as that one got toasted too – cost me $300 but looking at it and realizing that the cushion inside was gone and I had no head injury it was worth every penny as a clavical would have been the last of my problems.

    I rode the bike to Austin (35 miles)and my sister told me that Saturday night in Austin – I would be the last person seen given all the stabbings, shooting, wrecks, and crap. I went to a small town ER to get it x-rayed just so I would know what was broken besides the clavical which I already knew was broken because I couldn’t feel the bone off the collar. The Doc said it would eventually heal but I would probably look like Frankenstein as the bones were seperated by an inch and a half.

    I got a sports med orthepedic to look at it (if you are athletic – make sure you find someone who handles sports injuries – best way to find out is to call Sports teams or Universities and ask who the team doc is). On the phone his assistant said that they never see clavicals that need surgery. Yeah, well they did this time and I had surgery 2 days later with a metal plate and 10 screws that look like they came from metal shop. The doc said it would take 45 minutes of surgery but it took him 90 minutes as he had to pull one peice of the clavical out of my neck and the other off my lung. Duhhh, I told him that when I took a deep breath it hurt!

    They did the surgery on an outpatient basis and I went home that afternoon. They gave me Lortab which I took after the local and general started to wear off. I noticed that it made me sleepy and I noticed that the drug builds up so you get knocked out sooner the next day.

    Best place to sleep: on a couch with the bad arm up and 3-4 pillows to elevate your neck so it is horizontal with the spinal cord. Small adjustable pillow under armpit. The couch keeps you from rolling onto the bad side and allows you to sit up more easily.

    Drugs: I took last Lortab 48 hours after surgery and went to using Alleve. BTW, the doc called me up on the weekend to see how I was doing and told me that I could take Tylenol in between the Lortab schedule. Anyway, knowing that injuries can lead to drug addiction, I have always gotten off the hard stuff ASAP. I switched to ALLEVE which is an anti inflamatory and was taking 2 evey 12 hours. A bit strong but I am 49 yrs old, weigh 250 lbs and lift weights (gorilla). I was at work on Tuesday and have only used one hour per week going to the doc.

    2nd best place to sleep: your bed – 5 pillows all over the place so you can feel comfortable. I got a 7 foot roll of stretchable/elastic bandage (like what you see for knees) and tied a knot in it and place it around my waist. Then I wrap my injured arm’s wrist two times and make sure it is as loose as possible to eliminate cutting off circulation to the hand. This immobilizes the arm so I don’t have to wear that damn sling at night. It didn’t do any good as the arm would come out of the sling and be in my face in the morning anyway.

    The stiches are out and I am going back in 2 weeks for the follow up Xray. I am taking the calcium stuff and eating a lot of ice cream. Since I can’t go to the Gym to lift weights or ride my cycle I plan on just getting fat. All I want is to be healed up come spring so I can ride the bike, jet ski’s, and lift weights. I hate watching TV!

    Pains: It seems to evolve from inside injury to skin irritation like you have skin removed from your shoulder and it is open to air – ouchhh. I think they gave me shot in the side of the arm as it feels that way. I am getting an occasional electric like shock under the affected arm’s pec which I am not sure is related to the sling or what. And I have a pain in my chest bone 3 inches below the incision and the skin looks irritated. Maybe this is from the surgical clamps or they broke my ribs fixing me?

    Best advice: The clavical gets very little attention from the medical community if you see your XRAY and the bones are not in line with one another – be concerned as you could end up looking like the hunchback of Notre Dame. 2 doctors told me that and also, it may not be that bad looking at the X-ray but my Doc was surprised to see what he found. This bone does a lot of good things including your posture so you don’t want to screw around waitng to see if it heals on its own.
    Currently, I wear the sling in public so no idiot comes by and slaps my shoulder and I like the support it gives. The doc says i can get out of the sling at home as long as I don’t stress it by lifting anything etc. Also, he mentioned that the metal plate is going to break soon and that he wants it fused before it breaks. I am guessing that he had to hammer the plate to fit my bone and the 10 screws have weakened the plate which looks to be 4 inches long,1/8 inch thick and 1 inch wide. The screws are about 3/4 inch long and go through the bone and plate and in some cases are in muscle tissue. The pain is not that bad it is more irritating than painful.

  3. Hans Avatar

    Rob – Yup, it seems that asking doctors about using a figure-8 will give you as many different answers as there are doctors.
    But, I used one and believe it helped me heal quickly. I was back on the bike after a month. Others have also had good luck using one. There are some that have had problems. Most have been issues with fit and comfort. I think that has to partially be due to the cheap design of some of them. The straps and padding on mine were rather cheap and required modification to make it comfortable. A few people have recommended a product similar to a figure-8 that is called ShouldersBack (www.shouldersback.net). I haven’t used it though.
    As for doctors not recommending a figure-8, I have yet to hear a good argument why not to wear one. If someone would find some valid information against wearing one I will gladly post it.
    Until then, I still recommend a figure-8.

  4. Rob Vaughan Avatar
    Rob Vaughan

    Hi all
    51 male – broke kiting
    week 6 since break – x ray number 3
    1) x ray similar to number 2 ie broken ends still showing and a sort of mist around break
    2) little pain onyl when lifting or raising high
    3) dull ache in arm and hand
    4) DOCTOR SAID CAN GET OUT OF SLING !!
    5) But advised no biking for 3 more weeks 🙁 (not sure why)
    6) Back driving at last.
    7) o yea — they di say that they never recommend a figure of 8 in the UK? not sure if anyone had been given at advise in this country.
    ROB 🙂

  5. rachel Avatar
    rachel

    Hi All,
    You may remember me from a couple of weeks ago. Well, im on week 10 of recovery now. I must say, feeling much happier about my shoulder. Ive been having physio and Im back to doing everything I did before except for heavy lifting. I still find it uncomfortable sleeping on the side that I injured, but apart from that, Im fine. I didnt think it would ever be right a month or two ago, but for those of you out there that are feeling the same as I did, I hope this keeps your spirits up a bit! I have to climb my fingers up the wall in order to get my arms above my head and build my strength up again, which seems to be working, and ive been given a length of latex to pull! Anyway, Ill sign off now. happy recovering

  6. JJ Avatar
    JJ

    Another one to add to the club.
    First, thanks for the info. I broke mine playing hockey…er that’s ice hockey to my Yankee friends…as if there is another kind. 😉
    I’m on day 6 so lots of time to go. But this isn’t as bad as a shoulder dislocation I had a couple of years ago.
    Like my dislocation, for this injury I’m banking on a 6-8 week recovery time broken down as:
    First week: Move as little as possible.
    Week 2: Keep arm in sling most of the time, but take it out a couple times per day to move arm in non-painful way (i.e bicept curls with no weight. Also make fists, squeeze tight & relax.)
    Week 3: Hopefully sling is totally off. Try to introduce more motion using pain as guide.
    Week 4: More range of motion exercises, if pain levels are low introduce some resistance. Last injury (dislocation) standing in a swimming pool moving my arms around was great exercise. Maybe get a few sessions of Physio as well.
    Week 5+: More of the same. Start skating again.
    Week 6+: Goal is to have equal strength in both shoulders.
    Week 8: If all has gone well back to playing…(I hope!)
    Cheerio!
    JJ

  7. JLB Avatar
    JLB

    Gary, I think I know what you are describing… Its sound very simalar to what I experience. My pain was caused by skin nerves running over the fracture site being over sensitive. If I ran my fingers over the fracture site and moved the skin side to side, over the fracture site, the pain was sharp in nature. It took quite some time for this to settle and wear a backpack or a non padded seat belt. The nerves have settled with time. I also had some strange pains from time to time even though it was healing. Im not trying to say your fine but I had a simalar sounding experience which has healed.

  8. Roberta Avatar
    Roberta

    Came across this site today. Crashed over my handlebars (road riding) October 30th, when I broke hard to avoid two dirt bikes who appeared suddenly in the midst of our paceline (they hadn’t seen us). Landed on my head, but no loss of consciousness, and only a scratched (not broken) helmet. But broke left clavicle and right wrist, and have compression fractures of spine. Also experience extreme vertigo when I tilt my head. My orthopedist was in the paceline, so I knew right away about the clavicle, and realized the right wrist also hurt and I was screwed. Talk about being no-handed!

    After tons of x-rays at ER, my orthopedist came to set the wrist. ER released me with a figure 8 brace, a magic shot that put me out for first night, and script for codeine-acetaminophen. After 5 days, took that only at night. After another week, down to ibuprofens. X-rayed at doc after week 1 and week 3. Week 3 x-rays didn’t show bone growth in gap. I guess from these accounts, this isn’t that unusual, but it did depress me at the time. Figured I was using left hand too much, since right hand had even less mobility. Pain is down at the break, but if I’m overdoing it, i.e., upright for several hours, the whole shoulder hurts. Have been using left hand to feed myself for two weeks. Will revisit doc in another 3 weeks. He did mention electrical stimulation next if x-rays show no change. Has anyone had positive results from this? BTW, I’m a 54 year old female. Thanks to my hubby for cooking, cleaning, dressing me, becoming my hair stylist, etc. etc. and thanks to my friend for donating her button down shirts from when she broke her clavicle last year skiing.

    Roberta – If you can get “electrical stimulation” for recovery you are lucky. I’ve heard good results from it. But it’s usually too costly and insurance won’t pay for it.

    – Hans

  9. Bill T Avatar
    Bill T

    This is week 6 for me.I’m 58 and broke it when a car ran me off the road on the way home from work — I ride (rode) 7 miles one way every day for the last 20 + years. Went to a doc (#3) that said “if its in the same room it will heal” Well last xray shows it starting to get “sticky” I gues that means healing. I asked to start physical therapy and the ortho doc said wait another 3 weeks. I have been in a figure 8 since day 7 – before that a sling. I still hurt like crazy. Still get up during the night for a couple of tylenol. Still off work. Electrican by trade. Can’t lift my arm at all, haven’t been able to since I broke my clavical. I’ve been to three docs at this point and just hope this is going to heal on its own. Thanks All. What would we do without this support. At least I know I’m not the only one getting the run around or else they are telling me the truth. Who knows. Hans – thanks for the opportunity to vent. I guess I am thankful I am here with my family for this Holiday season. Have a great Thanksgiving all.

  10. David Avatar
    David

    Here’s my follow-up on my Oct 24th posting where I explained that I am a 50-year-old who broke his collarbone on Sept 11th in a biking accident. My break was was pretty serious in that it was in 2 places and displaced. After 5 weeks of waiting for my clavicle to rejoin my patience grew thin with my orthopod who wanted to send me home for another 4 weeks. At that point he said well why don’t you get another opinion from a surgeon who does upper body surgery. It was at that point that I realized that not all orthopods are the same insofar as some specialize in hips/knees and others specialize in clavicles, etc. So my first bit of advice is to choose an orthopod who specializes in clavicles/upper body. When I went to an orthopod who specializes in clavicles, he immediately said that after 2 weeks i should have been moving my arm/shoulder, and now I had a frozen shoulder. He immediately started me on physical therapy to un-freeze the arm. It wasn’t fun but after 2 weeks I started to make progress. But at week 7 the bones were still not joining and I made the decision to have surgery. On week 8 I had surgery which entailed re-aligning the clavile, shaving the 2 main pieces of the clavicle, plating the 3 pieces together, and a bone graft. The bone graft was taking a boring from my iliac at about belt level. This sponge-like matter was basically placed between the bones to encourage bone growth. I am now 2 weeks post-surgery and still sore. I’m not allowed to do any exercise except to move my shoulder in 3 directions to try to keep the shoulder somewhat loose. The clavicle is feeling better and I’m optimistic. Fortunately, I’m an attorney(save the jokes), and work has been the least thing affeceted by my injury. Time will still tell, however, as the bones still have to join to form a good, solid union. I’m glad I had the surgery, as I wasn’t comfortable with the idea of waiting several more months for possible bone growth, and then after 6 or 7 months having to make a decision about surgery or living with a non-union of the clavicle. It’s been a miserable 10 weeks, but hoping that in a few more weeks I’ll be cleared to begin to exercise, and that by the spring I’ll be back on my bike pounding up the hills. Since it’s cold here in the northeast my condition is slightly more bearable right now, but I’m still going crazy with not being able to workout, etc. Hope this is helpful, and let me know if you have any advise for me.

  11. Jewel Avatar

    PLEASE HELP!
    I have just broken my clavicle (and dislocated my shoulder) this past weekend during a ride. I got the shoulder back in, but the clavicle break was just confirmed today in an X-Ray. Now, I have a decent arm-sling, but I need your help- does anyone know if there is a place I can find a used figure-8-brace? I don’t have health insurance, so getting a brace from the doctor, with another painful bill, is not truly an option. I really don’t know a good place to buy one is, (and I have a small frame- 95 pounds and 5’1″- petite, you could say). Can you recommend a place, or if you have a child’s brace whom you no longer need…?
    Also, my break wasn’t completely through my clavicle, but from the top through the marrow- but the bottom part of the bone, (I’d guess about 15-20% from the X-ray), is still attached at the break. My question is am I going to have a lump, or how big of a lump if I do, (compared to someone with a complete break).
    Finally, going back to the no-insurance thing, aside from the over-the-counter or herbal pain relievers and the additional calcium with boron, what can I do at home to help myself heal faster and better?
    I truly appreciate all your help!!!

  12. Liza Avatar
    Liza

    Thanks for up date Steve I’m looking at having surgery.
    Two different docs said best could heal but feathered bones fragments are pushing bone up and the main break are not close. 1st doc said I could wait but When asked if it was him what would he do? Answer Surgery but he can’t do it. said let get 3rd oppion from surgeon he said yes but it my have final say so. Call physical therapist to get his Ideas on to have or not recovery care between the two and he said if he had my break he would have surgery better recovery. If only the dump bones would have not moved into worst position.
    Eric sure feel for you hang in there I’ve read this sites post many time each time get something more,.

  13. Eric West Avatar
    Eric West

    Yea, it sucks…. I just broke my right Clavicle last nite in a 4-Wheeler wreck. I was sent in the air 20 feet, and slid/rolled/filped for 180 feet…. So all of Y’alls Information has been helpful…. Thanx.

  14. Steve S Avatar
    Steve S

    Well, today is day sixteen after my break on the 4th of November. My ankle is about fully healed, still hurts when I move certain ways. As for my collarbone, the doctor did the surgery on Monday, the 7th of November. They made about a five-inch incision above the clavicle bone, realigned the bone and put a metal plate on top of it, which they attached with six or eight screws. By the 9th of November I did not need the sling anymore and was able to move my arm around somewhat. On November 16th, I went back to the doctor and had a couple of more x-rays done and they removed the staples at the incision site. Doctor said everything looks good and released me for light duty work starting the 21st of November. But since its Thanksgiving week I am going to just take this week off and start light duty on the 28th of November. As of today I can move my arm around fully as long as I keep it under shoulder level. Anything above shoulder level starts to cause a little pain. Doctor said hopefully by mid-December my shoulder should be good enough to return to regular work. Since the accident I have been sleeping in the living room recliner, as I feel most comfortable there sleeping on my back. I have a waterbed in my room and I can say it hurts to lay on with a broken shoulder. I am still wearing the sling while sleeping just because it secures my arm to my side and I don’t risk moving my arm the wrong way and waking up in pain.
    The doctor said within six months the bone should be completely fused and I have the option of removing the steel plates. He said unless they bother me or happen to come lose, there is no need to remove them. Anyone else still have these steel plates in and if so do they bother you?
    Anyways, good luck to everyone.
    Steve

  15. Liza Avatar
    Liza

    Hi read all the great post.
    I joined the club Nov. 7th. not an athlete, just a cool mom running the children’s wagon down the road so they could have joy rides. A little too fast and oversteering by son and mom flipped out backwards and landed in the road hitting my head and I quess my the right shoulder. The hospital put me in an arm sling pain pills and said come back tommorrow.The next doctor said yes bad break new pain med. the other pills made me itch by the way the seconad did also. My break looks like a z strecthed out with the middle broke in two peices. shoulder bone drops 1-2 cm then out to shoulder all this is touching. They made no recommendations for care here’s arm sling go home see you in two weeks. I woke up monday didn’t feel right call nurse said are you moving to much I said very little like they said. I started adding moist heat and took arm out of the sling now after talking with her. I’m off to see new doctor in the big city. He may say let it just heal but if not he’s one of the best surgeons
    Pain just tylenol. I used many homeopathics and vitmins.I can post From the book Smart medicine for a heathly child. Use same protocal on son for his arm last year. heals faster. I still think 8 sling was needed. bot with the drop I may be wrong. It will be nice to have a doctor that actually tells me more than ya you broke it. I KNEW THAT. SECONDS AFTER I DID IT.
    I do hair for a living and I need to hold up my arms.
    I find the most pain comes from the muscle .
    now I get muscle tremors when up and moving.
    I don’t know if I should still use the arm sling I think my arm may be freezing up. It can be hard to move and had to work to get the elbow to move again and I’m very weak.
    Please forgive typos with this new left hand typer.

  16. gary Avatar
    gary

    Hi everyone again. Thanks for the advice JLB I’ll hold out against surgery as long as I can. However yesterday started having sharp pain where the bone is under the skin as if it’s catching a nerve or something. I’m thinking maybe something has moved as had a cough lately….not the best thing for a broken collar bone! The pain is uncomfortable and quite intense at times but does feel almost superficial, and maybe just part of the bone healing itself. Anyone experienced this?

  17. Pete Avatar
    Pete

    Raichel, chill out. I joined the “Clavicle Club” on Oct 28 and I was freaking out all last week about it not fusing, etc. I’ve had three sets of xrays done plus the initial crapass one they shot at Lakeshore hospital, and if you were to make an animation out of them [hey, that’s a great idea for an animated GIF] you’d see my clavicle slowly moving back together. It’s not fused yet, but as I near week three, I feel the joint getting more solid every morning.
    Our bodies are remarkable, you just have to let it do it’s thing. Go have a look-see at your xrays, I’m sure your doc’s office would be happy to let you look.
    I know it’s frustrating. I keep questioning how I did this to myself in the first place – I should have been more careful dune-jumping at 40 MPH. Now I’m missing out on all the cool things I used to take for granted – had to give up my tix to see Ravi Shankar in Lansing, not being able to ride my bike or run..can’t work in the garage, can’t drive my GTO [stick]! Glad it’s winter. It just snowed for the first time here in MI last night.
    You’re not alone!

  18. Pete Avatar
    Pete

    I am happy today. It’s been a few days since I took off the figure-8, and today I went to have another set of x-rays taken. The bones are ALMOST aligned! Very jubilant. Doc says to come back in two weeks for another x-ray, and that I was right for ditching the sling. The strap went right over the break and was pushing the clavicle down and not letting it move. Also, I was prescribed Soma [muscle relaxant] because I am very muscular and they thought that maybe my muscles were fighting correct movement. I was having a lot of spasms, and the Soma settled them down, but the spasms stopped when I took off the figure-8 sling. I just can’t wait until one morning when I will wake up and my arm will feel “joined” solidly again!

  19. denn Avatar
    denn

    Hi peeps
    Check out these exercises for broken collarbones, click the picks to get bigger diagrams.
    http://www.med.umich.edu/1libr/sma/sma_brknclav_rex.htm
    DISCLAIMER: Ask your doctor when you can start these exercises, don’t just start doing them on your own accord.
    —-

  20. Raichel Avatar
    Raichel

    Hi, I broke my collar bone on Oct. 30th. After a pretty bad fall with my horse, I can’t tell all the details because I was knocked unconscious but long story short(after a million ppl telling me) we were jumping broke the pole broke in half he then tripped over it fell down I was launched off i landed head first my horse did a somersult over me (which we think broke it). Blah blah everyone says I’m glad to be alive, and a lot of people who have similar accidents have died or have been in a coma Also, my good fiend said they all thought I snapped my neck that’s why they were so scared. Personally I don’t think it’s true and this stinks pretty bad. At the ER after rough handling from a nurse and still not coherent, yelling at the Dr. that he was a liar and it wasn’t broke got it put in a sling and told I could back to school on wed. this was sun. thurs. at the latest. Yah that was a lie as I am going on my 3rd week and I still can’t dress myself let alone sit in those chairs for hours. I don’t know how bad my break is( even though I saw the x-rays) and I just went to my 2nd orthopedic the last one I saw on fri. after my break said I would heal fine just leave the sling on, my mom decided to get a 2nd opinion. Well, he put a figure 8 on and said it would take me 2 months to heal, I’m 20. Needless to say it hurt a lil and it still hurts to hold up my arm on my own for an extended period of time. I just hate it I look ugly as it is, before I looked like a pregnant lady with one arm( I couldn’t get my arm through my shirt) Now I look like the hunchback of notre dame with 2 big of lats. I just don’t know what to do, I thought it would be bette by now. The first OS said one day by the 3rd or 4th week I would just wake up and I would feel all better. Nope no not at all, vicodine is still my friend and my mom still has to be too close b/c I still cant do most normal things by myself oh and get up from lying down HA nope. Is there any hope? But anyways I’m sorry for the spastic rambling I just wanted to say it was nice to see other people know what I am feeling like. And it was nice to have a little chuckle.

  21. Hans Avatar

    Pete – I hate to say it but it sounds like someone told you the wrong way to use a figure-8. Wearing one should not cause you pain, especially intense pain. And wearing one fitted to the point it causes you to bleed? That’s crazy.
    From reading your first post it sounds like the figure-8 worked fine getting your break stabilized and a connection to form. But then you used your shoulder too soon and broke the connection. Then your doc decided to crank down the figure-8. After that you experienced all the problems. It’s speculation but maybe the doc didn’t adjust the figure-8 correctly.
    The figure-8 is used to assist in stabilizing your shoulder. But it can’t do all the work. The person wearing one must make an effort to keep their shoulder immobile. Over-tightening the figure-8 to compensate for more movement is a bad idea and can lead to problems such as you have described.
    So, don’t trash the figure-8 so soon. Find someone to adjust the figure-8 correctly. It should be tight but not to the point of pain, causes numbness, or loss of blood flow. I wore one and highly recommend one.

  22. Pete Avatar
    Pete

    Update: I had someone take the figure-8 brace off yesterday after I noticed blood everwhere. Put the sling back on for the night, expecting to go back into the brace after it was washed/etc., and when I woke up this AM the clavicle had popped back up and partially fused. Duh. Figure-8 brace was just to intense in this instance.
    The problem that remains is that I think the shoulder-side of the clavicle needs to go AROUND the stump of clavicle that comes off my chestbone. It has joined to the bottom of the “stump” and is definitely not right. Guess it’s time to suck it up and go to an ortho doc.
    Screw the figure-8 brace!

  23. Pete Avatar

    I’m male, 35 – three weeks ago today I went over my handlebars on a YZ250 at the Silver Lake Sand Dunes in Michigan. The motorcycle landed on me on the way down and I have a broken clavicle. The first week it actually seemed to be healing – pinching soft tissue, and then suddenly the pain stopped. I felt great. I was put in a figure-8 sling at the ER the day it happened, and hadn’t been out of it.
    Then, I am emberassed to say, it separated during sex. POP! Pain came back. I thought “OK, it will join again..”. The second week I had a checkup x-ray and found that the shoulder-side of my clavicle was about 2 inches lower than the sternum side. Doc realized that my figure-8 brace was WAY too loose, so they cranked it down and gave me a whole bottle Soma and sent me home to put a heating pad on it. After another week if there’s no change, Doc says I get referred to an orthopedic surgeon.
    The figure-8 brace freaking HURTS. It doesn’t hurt my shoulders or the break area, but my ARMPITS. It’s digging so deeply into my armpits and GRINDING THEM RAW. I wedged some soft flannel padding in there, but to no avail.
    What options do I have? I can really detect no activity after a few days even with the brace cranked down as much as possible – is it possible that I have a A/C tear as well that is leaving that part of my clavicle hanging? Can I take this stupid brace off at intervals every day to wash and stretch?!
    I am so frustrated and I don’t want to have surgery!
    Any help appreciated.

  24. JLB Avatar
    JLB

    Gary I can relate. I broke mine cycling too. Mine is overlapping about 1.5

  25. gary Avatar
    gary

    Hi everyone. I broke my collar bone on the 4th October mountain biking, attempting a drop off which went horribly wrong! I landed on the front wheel and went over the handlebars and landed heavily on my right shoulder. I ended up with a complete break overlapping by about 5mm maybe more. I was given a sling and told to rest. I went back to the hospital last Tuesday after about 5 weeks and the x ray showed that not much healing has happened. The doc told me to take my sling off and use it as normal and to come back in 6 weeks and there was a 50/50 chance I’d need an op. I can now move my arm to just above my shoulder and rotate with no pain but actually feeling the bone with my other hand feels awful! I’m driving now and can operate pretty well apart from the odd twinge of pain and an ache down my arm so I’m hoping it will fuse in the middle although I’ve a concern with the length of the bone as it’s overlapping…even though I have full movement…any thoughts?

  26. Hans Avatar

    Tracie – “They don’t look that sexy”… well… it depends on the crowd you are hanging around with. Get a bunch of cyclists together and they just love to show off their “sexy” collarbone bumps! :’)

  27. Tracie Avatar
    Tracie

    Rachel – I have the same thing – overlapping bones which were not originally overlapped and the orthopedic surgeon told me the same thing that Hans says. If they overlap they will eventually be stronger. I mean if you think about it, two bones on top of each other fused together are a lot stronger than two fragile ends joining up together. They don’t look that sexy, but after several months of collarbone recovery, who the hell cares?

  28. Hans Avatar

    Rachel – Having the bones overlapping is better than not touching. That gives them a better chance of fusing together. From your description I highly doubt you need surgery. If the doctor is really pushing for surgery you should go and get another opinion.

  29. rachel Avatar
    rachel

    Hi Everyone, its me again. Well, just been to have my shoulder x-rayed again only to find it has overlapped the other half I broke. Not too happy cause the doc said if its not better within the next few weeks we’ll have to discuss other options (Surgery was mentioned) After I saw the doc, I had a word with somebody in physio, and she said about 90% of these fractures heal this way with no problems afterwards. She put my mind at ease a little more. I can now drive (6 1/2 weeks) and go back to work but only light duties. Got to do exercises 3 times a day and going to physio at the hospital next week, so Ill see what they say then. Good luck everyone

  30. Terry Avatar
    Terry

    Tracie – I feel for you. I had that stupid sling on way too long and developed Frozen Shoulder. When I thought my collarbone could handle the treatment…I gave the green light to my physio guy to be aggressive and it was one of the most painful moments in my life. After 2 months of physio 3 times a week and countless hours of rehab…I can now lift my arm over my head and have 75% mobility. The doctor offered me cortisone shots but I declined. Try to get rid of Frozen Shoulder thru physio as surgery sounds nasty…they put you under so you can’t feel the pain and wrench your arm until its mobile. Unfortunately this force can tear the tissue inside your shoulder and could take months to recover.
    A friend of mine had Frozen Shoulder a few years ago and after many months of aggressive physio she was able to get mobility in her shoulder. Her and I now have a connection and discuss who’s physio was more painful 🙂 I’m hoping to gain full mobility in the next 4 to 6 weeks.
    I went to a massage therapist after my most painful physio sessions and it helped with the soreness.
    Good luck and you will get better…it just takes time and a lot of work.

  31. Tracie Avatar
    Tracie

    nearly 5 month update..sigh…I’ll say it one more time. DO NOT GET FROZEN SHOULDER!! Broke the collarbone on June 18th (dirt biking) and just had another x-ray today. Ortho guy said it could take up to a year to heal completely although I can resume normal sports and activities provided I don’t fall and avoid major impact. A bigger problem is that I still have limited mobility of my left arm due to frozen shoulder – I put the sling back on (doctor’s orders back in August) instead of following my own good – it turns out – instincts, which included removing it and exercising. I can ski this winter, provided my frozen shoulder (weak/mobility issues) doesn’t cause me to fall and break the collarbone again. Anyway, my orthopedic surgeon recommended intense and aggressive therapy The physiotherapist said go easy – didn’t want to risk re-breaking it, and my doctor back in August, told me to keep the sling on until the bone was completely healed…ahhhh.. the wisdom of professionals. Failing recovering from physio – for hte frozen shoulder, not the clavicle break – surgery is always an option.. he said..
    as if
    For anyone in the early stages of a broken clavicle, keep it moving, if only in short bursts,because frozen shoulder can last months or years. Incredibly, I still cannot lift my left arm above my head with ease, putting the seatbelt on is a strain, and the left hook I feel like using on the various ‘professionals’ who have all given me conflicting advice, is sadly ineffective. Listen to your instincts.. and get second, third and fourth opinions.

  32. Hans Avatar

    Art – You describe your lump as sharp and jagged. It’s difficult to compare with others since each is unique and descriptions are subjective. If you aren’t feeling pain that’s a good sign. But, I would recommend a follow-up x-ray to evaluate the break. Especially since you want to begin weight lifting again.
    Cherie – Yes, I am living with a non-union now. That break developed a fibroid connection which holds everything rather well. I have been able to do use it without problems. Evaluate the type of activities you do and discuss them with your doctor. If it turns out you perform activates that would require a fused collar bone then you will need to consider options for fixing it. Weight lifting is one activity for example.
    Steve S – There’s a few comments from people that have had surgery. Nobody has complained of problems. Take a look at the other two pages linked at the top of the page and the comments on them. There might be more information.
    Terri – Yes, if your shoulder does not hurt then slowly begin to use your arm. Rachel is correct in that moving your arm is helps to keep you from getting stiff joints. Just don’t move your arm to the point of causing pain. Also, be aware of the use and forget you are still heeling. No lifting heavy objects for example.
    Josh – I remember that dull shoulder ache. I would use a heating pad and massage the shoulder to help with that. It should go away soon as you use the shoulder more. As for surgery, it really sounds like things are going well as-is. It’s possible to continue with a non-union. I’ve had one and it hasn’t caused me problems.

  33. Rachel Avatar
    Rachel

    RE: Terri
    Read your message and Im in the same boat as you as regards to having kids and household chores to do. Ive only just stopped using my sling at 6 weeks. I found the first day my shoulder had a dull ache, but its now 4 days since I last wore it and I actually think its helped to do chores round the house as its kept my shoulder from going stiff. On the other hand, my break isnt as bad as yours, its a clean break and seems to be healing ok, so I came to the conclusion that if it hurts to do something, I wasnt going to do it. Im itching to get back in the car again. I tried to move the gears, but it made my shoulder ache for a while after. I dont know about you, but after all the time it takes to heal, its not worth breaking it again just for the sake of the house being tidy. I hope that helps!

  34. josh Avatar
    josh

    Progress report – – I’m in week 10, and x-ray last week showed no union yet. Doc said I don’t need to wear the brace anymore and we’ll look again in another month. First few days after the brace came off, the shoulder muscle felt fatigued at times, but that may be from disuse. I’m back to running 45-50 miles / week and the shoulder muscle sometimes feels tired after long runs, but not always and never to the point I have to stop. I feel like the arm is at 90% now, it’s going to be a tough call if the option of surgery comes up again.

  35. Terri Avatar
    Terri

    Hi, I’m Terri and just finished week 3 of one armed living. It is really interesting reading everyone’s stories but then again everyone is different so I’m not sure if what I’m doing is OK. OK, I’ll explain myself better. I’m a 41 year old wife and mother. I have two kids (thankfully old enough to do most things on their own) but I still have to clean, laundry, etc. Anyway – My break was pretty bad (I think) broken into 3 pieces. Until now I have worn the figure 8 brace all the time(which I think is the most wonderful invention!) and my sling most of the time. Today I left my sling off and did a lot with my arm. OK not alot compared to normal but more than I have been doing. NOW TO MY QUESTION – as long as things don’t hurt, can I continue using my arm as much as possible? I know I should call and ask the Dr. but you know how it is trying to get a hold of them. Just give me your suggestions. I don’t want to mess anything up but I don’t want to just sit around when I could be doing more. Understand? Anyway, thanks for your help.
    Thanks, Terri

  36. rachel Avatar
    rachel

    Just a quick progress report. Im now on week 6 of my recovery and all of a sudden last week, I actually noticed my arm felt like it was attached to me again. In fact, I took my sling off, forgot to put it on again and did my ironing without even realising. I go for an x-ray in three days which Im hoping they say I can return to work. Keep your fingers crossed for me and Ill let u know what they say

  37. denn g Avatar
    denn g

    Hi, I broke my right clavicle 2 weeks ago playing floor hockey, I slammed hard into a concrete wall.
    I just needed a place like this to vent and talk about my injury. Broken collarbone is more common than I thought (245+ replies), WOW.
    I’m in week 3 of healing, sometimes you think it will never get better. I mostly read or watch movies to pass the time but it is boring not being able to play sports.
    I’m 27 and beginning to think I’m not invincable like before my injury. We can feel so strong at one moment and at the next we’re like children, again.
    I don’t usually take my body for granted but the time of my injury I was tired and should not have been playing a competitive sport. Live and learn.
    Next monday I get x-rays, finger crossed, I hope the bone is being knit. The human body is amazing, I will try to treat mine like a temple.
    Thanks Hans & Laura for a place to talk about broken bones.

  38. Rob Vaughan Avatar

    I’s so bored now started doing blogs

  39. Rob Vaughan Avatar

    3 week – update rob – i am 50. had a 3 week x ray. could see some inprovement from orginal break. doctor advised me to keep sling on for another 3 weeks. bought my own sling which was much better than the rubbish one the nhs gave me. i can now do my own sling and not dependent others. no driving – damn !!!. i asked about fig of 8 splint and said they NEVER RECOMMEND that now. my next x ray is 28th nov (mon) and fly out to egpt on the 1st dec. looks like no diving — sob sob, just hope the sling off by then !! also taking calcium – not sure what it does but no harm. no pain – just bored bored !!!

  40. Steve S Avatar
    Steve S

    I came across this site today after doing a google search for broken clavicles. I have to say I found most of the stories very informative. Today, Nov 4, 2005, I was unfortunate enough to crash on my motocross bike. Besides the initial pain of the crash and the blacking in and out my body did not hurt to badly until I tried to stand up. While trying to stand up I felt my shoulder just collapse. I sat back down and felt my left clavicle and realized I had broken it. The pain was not real severe and I think my left ankle was actually hurting worse. My buddy made me a sling out of a tie down strap and we headed off to the hospital. After about a thirty-minute drive to the hospital (friend was driving me) and waiting in the waiting room for about 15 minutes I was able to see the doctor. I chose to go to an orthopedic surgeon instead of the emergency room since I figured they were going to refer me to one anyways. They did several X-rays of my left shoulder and of my left ankle and provided me with the good and bad news. Good news was my ankle was not fractured and was only sprain. Bad news was my left clavicle was completely fractured, just shy of being a compound. The surgeon informed me that there was no hope in slinging it to repair it and advised me that surgery would be the only other option since the chance of a non-union is likely. He said that he would make a small incision over the fracture area and retrieve the part of the bone that was just hanging down towards my ribs. He would then re-align them and place a metal plate over the fracture and attach it with screws. After that he said I would have to wait till Monday to have the surgery. He splinted my arm, put a brace on my ankle and gave me a prescription of Oxycodone and I went home.
    My biggest problem right now is just trying to move around. My foot is swollen and I can’t really put any pressure/weight on it to walk. Also since it is on the same side as my shoulder injury, I can’t use a crutch or cane. You don’t realize how much you use your shoulders until it’s broke.
    I do have a couple of questions I was hoping you guys could help with. Have any of you had the surgery and how was it. Also someone mentioned earlier about taking 2000 mg Calcium and 6 mg of Boron during the recovery time. Where do you get pure Boron, all I can find is the Boron (Trivalent Chelate) form, which I heard is not as good.
    Thanks,
    Steve

  41. Cherie Avatar
    Cherie

    Hans,
    Have you heard of people living with non unions? My MRI report yesterday was inconclusive…OS and radiologist are sending me back now for a CT scan. I had a heart to heart with OS though..asking him what he thinks is going on. I thinks I have a false joint. He said surgery is the only correction…and it is a messy, high risk surgery with a high risk of complications. Basically, if my bone isn’t healing on its own, surgery won’t really help without a bone graft.
    Since I am not in a lot of pain, he is basically suggesting I live with nonunion.
    If I had the option of surgery the first week or so of my injury, I would have gone for it.
    I’m so pissed!

  42. Art Ariaz Avatar
    Art Ariaz

    Hello all! I broke my clavicle 4 weeks ago playing flag football. I played six years of full contact football with practically no injuries and I decide to play in an intramural college flag football league only to break the middle 1/3 of my left clavicle while diving for a pass. I knew exactly what happened when I hit the ground with the tip of my left shoulder and heard the snap. I got up and rotated my arm around and I could feel the bones knocking and grinding on eachother. It was severe pain. I walked to the sideline and told my buddy to take me to the hospital. He just kinda looked at me puzzled because he didnt know I was injured, no one knew I was injured because I just got up off the ground and calmly walked to the sideline rotating my arm. By the time I convinced him to take me I was feeling light headed and nauseous. When I got to the hospital they immediatly gave me a shot of demerol right in the buttock area. This was a good thing because it took away the pain and made me feel relaxed and kind of happy for a while. The next few days were rough because of the pain. Vicodin was my savior for that first week. The second week was alot better but still a little pain when I would have to go sit in class and listen to lectures all day. The third week was really good I could lift my arm and rotate it practically no pain at all. Now this week I cant even feel the slightest bit of pain. I can lift my arm above my head move my shoulder back and forth and even lift things like a laundry basket. What is concerning me is that I have a huge lump where it was. It is kinda sharp and jagged. Is this normal for it to feel jagged when I touch it. I havent gone to the doctor because there is practically no pain at all and I can move my arm and everything and I wore my figure 8 brace for only 3 weeks. I would like to return to weight lifting as soon as possible but I know it wont be in the near future. If anyone has any advice I would greatly appreciate it. Good luck to all my fellow clavicle fracturers.
    Art

  43. Cherie Avatar
    Cherie

    Hans,
    I go in Wednesday to discuss results of MRI. I have been using my arm normally (gym, back to riding, etc), just not able to use at normal strength, or it literally feels like it could snap. My PT was surprised to find that I had questionable union, since the exercises we were doing (and I contined to do) should have stimulated bone growth. I am going to ask OS about a false joint at the union site. It feels like I have a joint there, which would explain lack of pain, yet odd sensation and weakness.

  44. Hans Avatar

    Cherie – I have heard good things about bone stimulators. You are lucky if you will be able to use one. I would try that first before trying surgery.
    Oh, your arm might be getting weaker because you aren’t using it. At least, according to what you wrote that sounds like the case. Were you doing strength exercises in physical therapy? Maybe you need to continue with those.
    You should mention the numbness to your doctor. That’s important information. It might be nothing or it might be something such as a nerve being compressed.
    Good luck and let us know if you get to use the bone stimulator.

  45. Cherie Avatar
    Cherie

    🙁 What’s worse than having a broken collar bone? Nothing!
    I broke mine back in May from a fall from my horse. I have been mostly pain free since August/September when I stopped going to physical therapy. After a while, I couldn’t help but notice that although I have pain-free range of motion, I still treat it like its broken!! It feels like it has been duct taped together, and my arm is weak. I am uncomfortable wearing a seatbelt, I’m afraid to lift anything very heavy with my left arm, and I still protect when sleeping, walking through crowds, etc.
    So, long story long, I go back to the OS, he xrays it and said I have “questionable delayed union”, so he sent me for an MRI, which I had yesterday. He said the next step will probably be a bone stimulator (Hans have you heard about anyone using them with success?), but I think I know what I’m going to be told next week- surgery. My arm is getting weaker, not stronger. I have strange numbness in my arm, and the break site feels “heavy”.
    My biggest fear when I broke my collar bone, was being told that it would heal on its own, suffer, than find out that I need surgery and start the suffering all over again.
    Glad I kept all my braces.
    F***!,
    Cherie

  46. Rachel Avatar
    Rachel

    Hey Rob!
    I broke my collarbone 4 weeks ago and Im still not driving. When I went back to orth, they said I have to keep it in a sling for another 3 weeks. I got a sling from a chemist (Wilsons) its much better cause I can now adjust it myself. The sling they gave me at hospital cut into my neck and gave me neck ache, so when I got this one, I also bought some foam and put it under the strap which goes round my neck. After 3 weeks, I wasnt relying on the sling so much, and I found I was holding my arm up myself without realising. I can raise my arm upto my shoulders and out to the side about the same amount. It doesnt hurt now unless I lye on it. Hope that helps
    Rach

  47. Rob Vaughan Avatar
    Rob Vaughan

    hi im 50 and broke my collor bone power kiting on the 15 oct – damn i should know better at my age !! im suppose to be going diving in egpty on the 1st of dec. anywy a few questions
    1) how much movement you recon i have and will i able to do some diving ?
    2) in the uk the gave me crappy hessan sling which just fall apart. can any one recommend a better trype sling with web site so i can see a picture
    3) when will i able to drive ? i have a gear shift
    thank for the help.
    rob 🙂

  48. alan Cook Avatar
    alan Cook

    hi, broke my shoulder 4 days ago and suffering in a similar fashion to others. is it ok to drop my lower arm out of the sling now and again as long as i sit still and prop my upper arm with a few cussions. also sleeping is a real problem as codine seems to mess up my stomach and cause severe cramps so all have is paracetamol which is pretty ineffective.
    my other concern is this. along with the shoulder break i also tore a muscle which means i wont be able to lift my arm horizontally, not that i could right now in any case. i’m hoping this will heal along with the bone re-jigger, as such. but,if i need surgey to patch up the muscle wont that require immediate physio ?
    thanks so much for this site. beats watching movies etc.

  49. AnnaKate Avatar
    AnnaKate

    Hi, I broke mine 4.5 weeks ago, and the images on the x-ray showed the bones to be at different angles and pretty far apart. All the stories of malunions are discouraging, and I will deal with that when it comes. My question is why does my entire arm ache when I am walking after 20 minutes, or stationary cycling after 10 minutes?? I wear a sling, and I try loostening, tightening, taking it off when I am biking…but it still aches??? Is this due to raised heart beat and atrophy…thanks, annakate

  50. Hans Avatar

    Terri – It’s important to keep the collar bone immobile as it’s trying to mend. Movement inhibits the healing process. A figure-8 brace works really well to stabilize and support your shoulder.
    But moving your shoulder joint and arm is important. Bending your arm at the elbow and taking it out of the sling occasionally during the day will help to keep the joints from freezing up. How soon you can move the arm and shoulder joint depends on your injury and other factors such as swelling. Always use the pain gauge. If it’s painful then stop. I only slowly began moving my upper arm and shoulder joint a week or so after the break. I never tried to stretch or push it too far. As the swelling and pain reduced I slowly increased my range of motion. But I was very careful not to hunch or move my shoulder so that it moved my collar bone. Again, the figure-8 helped. At first I didn’t do any particular exercises. Only simple range of motion actions. For example, moving my arm away from my body. Later, once my break had reconnected, I began more specific exercises.
    Someone posted a link to a site with standard exercises for a frozen shoulder. Ok, here it again:
    http://www.physsportsmed.com/issues/2000/09_00/pa_sandor.htm
    These are good once your collar bone has formed a connection.
    Hope this helps.

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