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The only way to avoid disappointment is to not try anything at all.
I made it worse by trying to train through it and it eventually became highly inflamed and developed bursitis as well. After that I tried many therapies that didn't work, then saw a surgeon who said to take some time off and come see me in 6 months. 6 months later it felt slightly better and decided to give it more time (stopping all training).
1 year later it is finally healed (3.5yrs from the initial tear). Lesson I learned is some injuries require complete isolation to heal and you only extend the recovery by training through it.
Last lesson I learned is don't stop working out.,Now I'm 30ils overweight because I listened to that little voice that said I can enjoy my time off and eat what I want because it will be fun to get back to training and loose the weight again (what?, ya no kidding...that's what I thought).
Anyway, I didn't want to add another scar without trying extended rest first. If it comes back I will be calling the surgeon the next day...
I was diagnosed with a Haglund's deformity on my left leg. I have attached a couple pictures so you can at least see what mine looks like. I consulted two orthopedic surgeons who both wanted to do the surgery described by mgodu02 where they would detach my Achilles tendon, reshape my calcaneus, and then reattach the tendon. The surgeons really had me convinced that this would be a cure all but when I talked to my sister and her husband who are both physical therapists they vetoed the idea. Their opinion from having worked to get many patients moving again post surgery was that due to the long recovery times and complications associated with cutting and reshaping the calcaneus, surgery should be only be considered as last resort after all other options have been exhausted. I have seen at PT who worked primarily with dancers and that made a huge big difference in my quality of life. I guess dancers get all sorts of crazy foot and ankle injuries and the PT knew some tricks to improving my situation and getting me more mobile again. As far as I am aware, surgery is the only cure. Therapy has not cured me and I still have pain and difficulty moving my ankle when I get up in the morning. But after 4 years, I'm running 40-50 miles a week and didn't have to go through the expense or risks associated with surgery. That being said my Achilles is not torn and if your tendon is torn or significantly damaged that could be a whole nother can of worms. If mgody02 had the surgery get the specifics from his about his recovery.
Sometimes it gets inflamed and sore, but usually it is a pain I can tolerate.
The post above about how German doctors remove it without detaching it sounds promising though.
Anyway, I run about 15 miles a week now and it is good enough for shorter races as far as training is concerned. The most frustrating thing for me is that I am never sure how the foot will react. Sometimes it feel ok and once warmed up there is no pain. Sometime I cannot take 2 steps before I have to stop.
I do not want to have the surgery done as there is nothing wrong with my Achilles. If however that is the only solution I will retire from racing to try and minimize the pain.
Good luck to you.
Looking like a color blind super hero!
Damn triathlon.