Last January, while clearing the snow from his roof, Dave Charlebois was learning on a ladder with one foot on the gutter when he suddenly slipped and tumbled nine feet to the ground. Having fallen between the ladder and the gutter, he landed on his left heel—the same heel that he had previously fractured while snowmobiling in 2009. The pain shot up from his heel to his back. After the fall, Dave, a professional truck driver, kept at it, despite the constant pain. “When I’d chain up the truck, I did not cramp up, but felt pain in my lower back.”
The accident happened a month before Dave and wife Kim’s upcoming international snowmobile adventure in Saratoga, WY. The couple, who live in Les Coteaux, Quebec, went anyway. During the weekend, Dave’s pain grew worse. On the first day, he hit his left leg on a rock while snowmobiling. It hurt, but he took a few pills and kept on going. “At the end of the day, I’d go lay in the Saratoga Hot Springs, and it would feel better, but then it got worse again. Kim had to pull up my boots when we went snowmobiling.” By the time the two reached Laramie after leaving Saratoga and heading home, Dave could not get out of the car without Kim’s help.
Fortunately, Dave knew Dr. Michael Janssen, a spine surgeon at the Center for Spine and Orthopedics. The two became friends after meeting at a speedboat race years earlier.
In fact, Dr. Janssen, a fellow outdoor enthusiast, had led Dave and Kim’s back country snowmobile adventure at the Saratoga Hot Springs Resort, in Saratoga, Wyoming,
Upon returning home, Dave sent Dr. Janssen an MRI of his spine (see below for details), which revealed a fracture and a herniated disc in his lumbar spine at his L5 disc. “Dr. Janssen recommended surgery as soon as possible but he didn’t push it,” says Dave. “I knew the pain was not going to go away on its own, but I wanted to wait until after my busy season to have surgery.”
On December 5, Dave and Kim flew to Denver. At 7:30 a.m. the next morning, Dave had spine surgery by Dr. Janssen. He awoke from the anesthesia at 10:30 a.m. and left the hospital an hour later. “I was surprised to walk out that fast,” says Dave. “It was crazy how good I felt.”
Dave and Kim returned to their hotel, and he walked that day for 15 minutes at a time. After walking, he applied ice, rested for 30 minutes and then walked again. “The next morning, his pain was gone. “Since earlier this year, I have always had chronic back pain, but Thursday morning, it was gone,” he says. He went to see Dr. Janssen for a follow up visit that afternoon. “Dr. Janssen explained some restrictions. He told me ‘no snowmobiling for a year’ as he knows how I ride with only two hands on the bars,” says Dave with a laugh.
The couple would have booked a flight home on Thursday if they’d known how good Dave would feel. Instead, at the end of Dave’s follow-up visit, Dr. Janssen invited them to join in the Center for Spine and Orthopedics’ “Roaring 20’s Casino Night” Christmas party that night, which they did. They fit right in with their new friends at the center, enjoying great food and fun, playing blackjack and poker with fake chips.
On Saturday morning, the two then flew back to Montreal where they spent the holidays and started getting back to the activities they love. “The most important satisfaction in life is helping others like Dave overcome physical setbacks and return to work and the activities they enjoy pain-free,” says Dr. Janssen.
If you would like for Dr. Janssen to review your MRI, the cost is $500 and can be arranged by calling the Center for Spine and Orthopedics at 303-287-2800. Dr. Janssen does require a recent MRI (within the past six months). As an alternative, you can schedule an appointment with Dr. Janssen, in which case, there would be no charge to review your MRI, and your visit would be billed to your insurance. Due to the large volume of requests, we are currently exploring telemedicine as an option, but that is not yet available.