From: Paul Carmichael on
Lots of injured type folks around here, so here goes:

When I touch the front of my knee, the *outside* of my leg hurts. Also
numbness in the calf and aching hamstring. Just damaged nerves that will
heal themselves? Or should I be worried (actually, I already am)?.

--
Paul.
CBR1100XX SuperBlackbird (Buen mueble de patio), Orbea Dakar
BOTAFOT #4 BOTAFOF #30 MRO #24 OMF #15 UKRMMA #30
http://paulcarmichael.org/ (content pending)
From: TOG on
On 11 Aug, 11:58, Paul Carmichael <wibbleypa...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Lots of injured type folks around here, so here goes:
>
> When I touch the front of my knee, the *outside* of my leg hurts. Also
> numbness in the calf and aching hamstring. Just damaged nerves that will
> heal themselves? Or should I be worried (actually, I already am)?.
>
Can I have your Blackbird?
From: wessie on
Paul Carmichael <wibbleypants(a)gmail.com> wrote in news:8cfe2sFoaoU1
@mid.individual.net:

> Lots of injured type folks around here, so here goes:
>
> When I touch the front of my knee, the *outside* of my leg hurts. Also
> numbness in the calf and aching hamstring. Just damaged nerves that will
> heal themselves? Or should I be worried (actually, I already am)?.
>

sounds like the sciatica that my sister had - she's had treatment and
doesn't have too mich of a problem nowadays.

See a GP.

--
wessie at tesco dot net

BMW R1150GS
From: crn on
Paul Carmichael <wibbleypants(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Lots of injured type folks around here, so here goes:
>
> When I touch the front of my knee, the *outside* of my leg hurts. Also
> numbness in the calf and aching hamstring. Just damaged nerves that will
> heal themselves? Or should I be worried (actually, I already am)?.

This is one of medicine's little mysteries. Sometimes nerves will mend
on their own, often taking several years such as when the wife had the
end of a finger darned back on. Other times if a nerve is severed it
will stay that way. If you have feeling in an area the nerve is only
damaged rather than severed and should recover eventually. Do you have
any feeling in the areas that appear to hurt when you touch the knee ?.
Trapped nerves can be caused by bone abnormalities and can be fixed
with surgery - a common example is carpal tunnel.

--
03 GS500K2
76 Honda 400/4 project
78 Honda 400/4 in black
06 Sukida SK50QT (Slanty eyed shopping trolley)
From: sean_q on
Paul Carmichael wrote:

> When I touch the front of my knee, the *outside* of my leg hurts.

I believe this is called "referred pain".
See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Referred_pain

Apparently the cause is unknown... to western medicine, at least.
Chinese acupuncturists probably know something about it.

Meanwhile, get a pretty girl to touch the front of your knee
and see if you get any "referred pleasure" [a term I just made up,
although I wouldn't mind being a research subject].

SQ