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🦴 Heal in Style with the Sarmiento Brace!
The BraceAbility Sarmiento Brace is a specialized splint designed for the recovery of humeral shaft fractures. It features adjustable straps for a custom fit, promotes healing through targeted compression, and allows for elbow mobility while providing essential support. With a comfortable stockinette sleeve and a 45-day satisfaction guarantee, this brace is the perfect companion for your recovery journey.
D**Y
Feals so much more secure
Okay a few reviewers are dreaming. So, I have7+ fractures in my upper numerous. Worse pain ever. One break all through and out of alignment, rest smaller fragrements in one area. I have a transplant and COVID is the worse ever in states (11/20). Ortho doesn’t want me anywhere in hospital many days so now in splint. Accident 22 days ago.Not sure what their expectations are but I’m pleased and feel more comfortable! People need to remember you can’t cast that high and in our difficult times, sometimes we need to go different routes. My doc is thrilled. I know bones are aligning. And if we keep safe a bit longer we’ll have vaccines. Embtace being safe and how our new world grows% using both sleeves and have polar fleece to switch out. Planning to be better for A wonderful ringing in of 2021!,
D**K
How big are you?
I am not a hulk but this is made for one. I can’t even bend my elbow in this!
A**D
humeral shaft fracture split cast
brace was ideal, what a great design but was to big for a 9 year old the length was to long and width was right that was what i went by the width when i brought it . i return parcel the very next day, sorry and waiting to be refunded it cost me $79.98 new zealand dollars on 16 march 2022 to post i was not happy that it cost me heaps, as it cost me nz $246.66 to buy already
A**R
Protection
Protects the arm, and you can move it. Fingers do not swell, easier to sleep with than a sling.I took it in and asked the doctor if I could use it, and she highly recommended it, and put it together.
J**4
Five Stars
excellent
C**L
Worst piece of equipment ever!!p
Oh fractured my dominate humerus a month ago and wearing this torcheres brace ever since I still have a lot of pain! I totally agree with Christine and will head to another doctor tomorrow’Do yourself a favor if you are able and find something else.It’ makes the old Indian bark wrap look far better!
R**Y
Seems to secure my humerus well so far, but a pain to put on by yourself.
This is the second brace I've tried for my humerus that broke midshaft a couple of weeks ago, acquired at the recommendation of my orthopedic doctor after he was unsatisfied with the results of the brace that his office put on previously.Compared with the other brace I've used, I see several pros and cons of each compared to the other.Pros of this one:Most importantly, this one seems so far to be holding my humerus in place better than the first one did, though I haven't had x-rays again yet since I got this one to confirm that the alignment is better. It certainly feels significantly more secure, though, and wearing this was the first time in 2 weeks that I've been able to let my forearm hang down for a bit without extreme pain (though it still feels better to also use a sling for now.)The shoulder piece and chest strap on this one help to support the weight of the brace and the upper arm from the shoulder. The other brace I used was just around the upper arm itself, so the weight of the brace was just hanging on the (broken) upper arm. This one supporting its own weight is definitely appreciated.Cons of this one:This thing is a real pain to put on properly, especially by yourself. As a single guy who lives alone, that's pretty inconvenient, and I'm more easily able to do it than many would be. Most of the cons of this brace relate to this:Due to the length of the velco straps, they actually attach mostly on the back side of the arm, making it quite a pain to reach with your opposite arm. The loops that the straps run through are (thankfully) on the front side of the arm, but the straps are quite long, so the velco actually attaches mostly on the back.Tightening the straps is also a pain to do by yourself with one hand (which is, of course, all you have available, since the brace is on the other arm... and that arm is broken.) Pulling sufficient tension on the straps and then holding it while wrapping them back underneath your (broken) arm to attach the velco is easier said than done.The four plastic plates of the brace also tend to shift around on the velcro as you're tightening it due to the large amount of friction between your arms and the plates while the straps are tensioned. In short, getting all of the plates placed correctly around your upper arm while tightening the straps using only one hand is no easy feat. Granted, it's somewhat easier after the first time once you get the plates in the approximately correct position, but you still have to control for their tendency to shift around.The other brace I used had a far superior solution to this problem. It used laces that were all wrapped through a ratcheting mechanism attached to a knob. So literally all you had to do to tighten it was to lock the ratchet, then twist the knob until it was tight enough. Then, to release the tension, you just released the lock on the ratchet mechanism by pulling the knob outwards. Obviously, that's far, far easier to do when you only have one hand available.Other cons:The sizing on these is only by upper arm diameter. In my case, the vertical room allotted for the shoulder is a bit tight. Even with the inner piece all the way up against my armpit, the shoulder mold on the outer piece doesn't really reach the top of my shoulder well. On the flip side, I have pretty long arms (6' tall man here) and the inner piece is just about the right size for me, so I can definitely understand the reviews from women who said it was far too long for them. I wouldn't want it to be shorter for my arm length, though, as it would then provide inadequate support to my humerus, so providing no options for different arm lengths is problematic, especially since upper arm diameter is only moderately correlated with upper arm length (it's more correlated to arm muscle and/or fat mass than arm length.)Per the manufacturer's website, these are not water safe, so should not be worn in the shower. The other brace I had was water safe, so could be worn in the shower, though drying it out sufficiently afterwards did require briefly removing it. Having a brace on while showering did help to keep my arm more stable when showering. I may still just put the old brace on when I shower. Additionally, though, this brace not being water safe means you have to deal with the above-mentioned pain of a process to get this brace back on each time you shower, which you'll likely want to do more than the once every 3 days they recommending cleaning the brace.Overall thoughts:Overall, I still prefer this brace over the other one on the whole simply because it seems so far to do a better job of performing its primary function - stabilizing my broken humerus - while also not putting its weight on said broken humerus. But it would definitely be nice to see a new brace that combined the stability of this brace with the much easier ratcheting mechanism (and, ideally, water-safe materials) of the other one.
J**A
Worst medical product ever.
Painful to wear with a stabbing feeling and an unsteady application. Piece of garbage, it should be easily replaced by the medical community.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
3 days ago