L.,
My seven year old was born with bilateral club feet. My first thought was that eight weeks is very, very early to do the tenotomy. Our son was casted from the hips down to the toes for the first five months of his life and then lived in a bar for the next year or so. It was so worth it. We decided to not do the tenotomy. We were told the surgery could help, but that it would also make him more prone to injuries later in life. Are you sure his feet cannot be further corrected by casting?
When our little guy got to be about three months old, he started to get too strong to cast in the office. His resistance was so strong that they couldn't stretch the muscle well enough. Therefore, they had to put him under (knock him out in an O.R.) but they never cut. We really wanted to avoid that. Having him put under was hard enough, especially when you can't let them eat for the 8 hours before surgery. I don't know what they will do with an eight week old with that.
He was almost 18-months-old when he stopped sleeping with the bar. It never interrupted his sleep, but the crib was pretty beat up from him turning over. He also had the strongest abs I've ever seen in a baby. He could do a sit up starting at around six months.
Now, he is seven and he is a little pigeon-toed; his feet look like John Elways! He remembers nothing. He has no scars and he can run and play like any other boy. We do not regret not having the tenotomy.
A friend of mine had a little boy last March who was born with one club foot. It was not as severe. They casted for a while and did physical therapy. He is now walking all over the place at 10 months!
I would ask if the tenotomy is necessary and if you can wait. Don't be is a big hurry to fix it now. Sometimes the slower something is corrected and healed, the better it is.
If you would like to contact me with any quesions, feel free. I'm trying to remember the doctor we saw. If I come up with the name, I'll send you another note.
Praying for you and your family,
T.