Surgery

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Johnny Impact

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I had an appendectomy at 3am yesterday. First surgery I ever had. I just felt like posting the experience here. Share your own surgery stories.

Tuesday afternoon: Came down sick. Nausea, chills, exhaustion, painful feeling of pressure through my abdomen.
Tuesday night: Symptoms of sickness fade away, leaving a painful stitch in my lower right abdomen. I toss and turn all night.

Wednesday morning: Still hurting. Go to work, thinking I'm going to tough it out. I'm there five minutes before realizing it was a mistake. Pain increases. I am moving like an old man, slow and bent.
Wednesday 4pm: Leave work early. Go to Express Care a few miles from my house. Express Care doctor examines me for maybe 45 seconds, says, "Yep, you have appendicitis. Get to the ER."
Wednesday 6pm: Get in car at Express Care intending to drive to hospital. Pain explodes from severe annoyance to debilitating, teeth-gritting agony. Imagine putting your thumb on a granite surface and smashing it as hard as you can with a hammer. Now put that pain in your abdomen, and don't let it fade away like a hammer strike eventually would. Drive myself to hospital anyway.

Wednesday 7pm: Arrive Maine Medical. Hobble to ER entrance, where the considerate doorman runs a wheelchair over to help me inside. I sign simple paperwork, consent to treatment, and am put in waiting room.
Wednesday 7:20pm: They see how bad I am hurting and bump me to the front of the line. I am triaged and put in my own room. They have me put on a johnny and stick an IV in for fluids.
Wednesday 7:50pm: Nurse puts morphine through the IV. Morphine is awesome.

Wednesday 8pm-11pm: People come in every twenty minutes or so to ask me the same set of questions (any allergies, drug habits, etc), take my vitals, and tell me I'm on the slate for a CAT scan. My brother shows up to visit around 8pm, stays until after 1 the next morning.
Wednesday 11:30: I am wheeled down to X-Ray to have a CAT scan. Never had one of those before. Having foolishly refused the offer of more morphine, I have a hard time lying flat on the CAT scan bed. Fortunately the test is short.

Thursday 12am: Back in my room. Doc says he's certain I have appendicitis, that they're only waiting for the scan results to make it official. I'll have surgery in the morning.
Thursday 1am: Surgeon comes in, informs me my appendix perforated. This increases the urgency of surgery. They will take me shortly. As Maine Med is a teaching hospital, the seasoned surgeon will stand by while a training surgeon does the operation, ready to jump in if there is trouble. My stomach is poked and prodded for the dozenth, and I hope the last, time.

Thursday 2:45am: I am wheeled down to the holding room (the last room you're in before surgery; there's a lot of "on deck" positioning in hospital) to talk to anesthesiologist. Everyone has shower caps and breath masks here. There's a lot more security in this part of the building, the attendant uses his keycard four or five times. Things look more sterile and expensive.
Thursday 3am: Enter surgery. Carefully move from gurney to operating table. Oxygen mask is put over my face. I breathe deep as instructed. There is no drowsiness at all, I am simply gone.

Thursday 5:30am: I am awakened in recovery. Anesthesia is lost time, you don't dream or anything. They give me two oxycodone and wheel me back to my room.
Thursday 6am-5pm: You can't sleep in a hospital. You doze, but you don't sleep. Too much activity, people coming in every twenty minutes. My roommate is a professional victim who doesn't understand anything. For example, he is given the same room service menu I am given, but instead of calling room service himself, he calls the nurse station instead to "send someone down here to get me sumpin to eat." He has the nurse order him a lobster sandwich, which he then refuses to eat. For amusement, I count the number of times he complains about not being given enough painkiller.

Thursday 5:30pm: Various staff members have told me I will be in the hospital for different amounts of time, ranging from three days to being released this afternoon. The surgeon comes by to check on me, tells me it wasn't as bad as she thought. My appendix came out fine, infection was minimal. I'm on an IV of heavy antibiotics as a precautionary measure. My folks arrive to visit, having come as soon as they returned from a camping trip.

Thursday 6pm: Surprised nurse tells me I can check out. I sign some forms, accept a prescription for more oxycodone, and carefully dress.
Thursday 7pm: Shuffle slowly out of hospital under my own power. Go to spend a couple days with my folks, so I won't be alone.

Thursday 8pm: Awkward but much-needed shower (you sweat all the time in the hospital whether you're hot or not), change of dressing, fall into bed.

Friday morning: Wake up refreshed. Hobble downstairs, enjoy delicious pancake and strawberry breakfast. Take more oxy. Park ass on sofa and immediately fall asleep.
 

Korolev

No Time Like the Present
Jul 4, 2008
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It's good that we're in the 21st century. Modern Laparoscopic surgery allows the patient to leave with days or even hours after surgery. If you have been born 50 years ago, you may have had to remain in hospital for a least a week after surgery.

It's strange that you had to have a scan - the surgeons I've talked to don't even bother with that - if they're highly suspicious of appendicitis, they just perform the procedure straight away. They reckon that, at least in a male, there aren't too many things that can cause the same symptoms and the actual procedure takes like, 10 minutes and it is incredibly safe (and even if its not your appendix that's causing the problem, they can just take it out anyway because why not?). Then again, I'm in Australia, where our medical system is a bit more.... um... not "slap-dash" but more "simplest-approach" than the US system (assuming you live in the US).

Glad to hear it went well. Medicine has come a long way. Houdini died of a ruptured appendix (which went on to cause peritonitis) in the 1920s. Care back then was quite primitive - the attending physician thought that an increase in Houdini's temperature during his treatment was a "pleasing sign" (it wasn't! It was freaking peritonitis!). Then again, there wasn't much they could have done for Houdini back in the 20s - they didn't have antibiotics (although they did have a few tentative "anti-microbials" which were pretty rubbish) so once the peritonitis set in, there wasn't much anyone could have done for him.
 

Rylot

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May 14, 2010
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Glad everything turned out alright for you. I know it can be scary as hell when you're in the hospital with unidentified searing pain.

Being born with Spina bifida I've had over a dozen surgeries from my second day of life until sophomore year of high school. My case is more on the mild side so luckily most of my surgeries were non-life threatening, but having to face going under the knife so regularly has taught me a lot about how to handle anxiety and fear. How to keep my mind busy and off of the growing and constricting steel ball of dread that settles into the pit of your stomach in the weeks and days leading up to a surgery.

As for the worst surgery I've had, that would be skin grafts (having decreased sensation in my lower body means that I can't really tell when my skin there is too close a heater until it starts to blister and burn). The square they took skin from the top of my thigh which can fully feel and holy shit did it hurt afterwards. Anytime so much as a breeze touched it I'd get searing pain up my side. It did however have the cool side effect of turning purple anytime I'd stand up and the blood rushed to my leg. Unfortunately that didn't last and now it's barely visible.
 

Dirge Eterna

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Korolev said:
I'm in Australia, where our medical system is a bit more.... um... not "slap-dash" but more "simplest-approach" than the US system (assuming you live in the US).
Its not so much that they aren't as through or slap dash as you put it. Its that our medical system lives in perpetual fear of getting sued for even the smallest mistake or misstep. If they don't go through all these steps and rule out pretty much anything else the lawyers start to salivate. They basically have to cover all the bases to be safe. If lets say you had a fall and a bump on your head and went to see the Dr. and they didn't do all the required tests and just said take some aspirin and go home and you collapsed and died from a aneurism or something then boom huge lawsuit! Even if what killed you had no connection to the injury, they have to go overboard. And with the huge scam that medical insurance is here in the US they know they will get paid as long as it is deemed medically necessary at the time. Our system is shit but the politicians wont allow it to be changed because they are all in the pockets of the health insurance companies.

Disclaimer - I worked for an HMO health care company for 9 months, left because it was crushing my soul having to fuck people over because they didn't follow every single rule. When you or a loved one are sick who is checking the policy for the right steps, you just trust the doctor or hospital to do whats right. But of course the company could skip lots of things and still expect you to pay your premiums, then deny you coverage based on BS.
 

Roofstone

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May 13, 2010
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I am gonna get surgery some time from now, a few months or so. I'll not go into details but it is not serious. I will say that I am looking forward to getting rid of the problem.

Hope I can bring my laptop, it'd be boring to just lay there in bed..
 

Guffe

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Jul 12, 2009
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I was in suregry for a thing called "Pilonidal Cyst / Sinus Pilonydalis" which in my translation from doctor language to normal language basically means that my own body hair is eating me up from the inside. They grow inwards and make cannals and holes inside my body which then gather all sorts of shit in there.

This happened in May and the area it happened in was the ass area, so they cut me open and took out all the shit from there etc and then it was just to wait. A few months later I'm feeling fine but the wound hasn't fully healed so I get an appointment with my doctor and his answer when he saw it was: Well... I'll have to cut you open again. Then he stabbed me with a needle and I fell asleep, wake up an hour later and get a 2 week, "sitting and lying on my back ban" while machine of some sort is attached to my ass to keep the wound clean. (this was last weeks friday)

So yeah, one more week, the half way through check he said everything is looking promising so fingers crossed!
 

Estranged180

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Mar 30, 2011
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Guffe said:
while machine of some sort is attached to my ass to keep the wound clean
That thing attached to your ass is called a "WoundVac", and it's there not to keep the wound clean, it's there to avoid the issue you had while the wound didn't heal... an infection. If the staff knows what they're doing, you'll be out by week's end. The experience I have with this thing isn't quite what you'd think. My wife is a nurse in a cardiac unit at a local hospital, and the WoundVac is a necessity. Try to imagine getting that type of infection in your chest. It would (and has in the past) kill a person.

OT: I can't decide which surgical experience I've had was worst. I've had the left side of my face reattached after a dog bite. I've had the 3 bones in my left elbow surgically set after a stone had gotten wedged between the 3 of them. I've had a titanium plate to replace my right cheekbone after it was shattered. I've had some surgery for a more personal reason.

I know that I'll have to have some spinal surgery, and a knee replacement in the future... You decide which was worse. It's really all the same to me.
 

MeChaNiZ3D

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Aug 30, 2011
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I broke my ankle at one stage. The only notable thing about my hospital trip was the anaesthetist looked as much like the Joker as a regular person could be expected to look, namely the stranded hair, sunken eyes and stretched mouth. Then again I was probably on something at the time.
 

Guffe

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Jul 12, 2009
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Estranged180 said:
Guffe said:
while machine of some sort is attached to my ass to keep the wound clean
That thing attached to your ass is called a "WoundVac", and it's there not to keep the wound clean, it's there to avoid the issue you had while the wound didn't heal... an infection. If the staff knows what they're doing, you'll be out by week's end. The experience I have with this thing isn't quite what you'd think. My wife is a nurse in a cardiac unit at a local hospital, and the WoundVac is a necessity. Try to imagine getting that type of infection in your chest. It would (and has in the past) kill a person.
Yeah, it puts pressure under the bandage on the wound to keep it healing the correct way (inside first and lastly the skin).
The one I use is called a "PICO" but I guess the name just changes based on what country you're in.
My moms a nurse too so she's told me all about it, I remember some parts of it :p
 

Johnny Impact

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Roofstone said:
I am gonna get surgery some time from now, a few months or so. I'll not go into details but it is not serious. I will say that I am looking forward to getting rid of the problem.

Hope I can bring my laptop, it'd be boring to just lay there in bed..
Actually you'll spend a lot of time answering questions, dozing off, and being wheeled around. I brought a book to the hospital and only read 75 pages of it. Depending on your pain level you may be too distracted to do much of anything.
MeChaNiZ3D said:
I broke my ankle at one stage. The only notable thing about my hospital trip was the anaesthetist looked as much like the Joker as a regular person could be expected to look, namely the stranded hair, sunken eyes and stretched mouth. Then again I was probably on something at the time.
That would have creeped me out. My anesthesiologist looked and talked like Ben Stein. Made me wonder if he'd been sampling the product.
Rylot said:
Glad everything turned out alright for you. I know it can be scary as hell when you're in the hospital with unidentified searing pain.

Being born with Spina bifida I've had over a dozen surgeries from my second day of life until sophomore year of high school. My case is more on the mild side so luckily most of my surgeries were non-life threatening, but having to face going under the knife so regularly has taught me a lot about how to handle anxiety and fear. How to keep my mind busy and off of the growing and constricting steel ball of dread that settles into the pit of your stomach in the weeks and days leading up to a surgery.
I wasn't scared. I was in a good hospital, which is the best place to be. I was 99% sure it was appendicitis, which is among the easiest things to fix. My only concern was the CAT scan would come back with more serious results -- ruptured bowel or something. My father had diverticulitis resulting in surgery, colostomy bag, long recovery period, another surgery to put his bowel back together, then another long recovery period. The symptoms are similar enough to appendicitis that I was concerned.

I've heard of spina bifida. Life dealt you a ***** hand there, my friend. Sorry to hear it.
 

roushutsu

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Mar 14, 2012
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I've only had 2 surgeries: tonsil and wisdom teeth removal.

While I was in high school, my top wisdom teeth were coming in at an angle and my bottom teeth were completely horizontal. They weren't hitting nerves yet, but the dentist said in time it would be a problem, so I decided to just yank them out to avoid issues. I had my surgery during spring break. So while every one was partying and vacationing, I was recovering. Fun times. Fortunately the doctor did a great job because after about 3 days I was off medication and feeling pretty good, but I still had to eat ice cream and such for the rest of the week so I wouldn't screw up the stitches.

I think I was about 6 or 7 when I my tonsils got infected and needed to be removed, but my recovery was horrific! The doctor was only willing to give me codeine and I'm allergic to it. So I had to recover without any medication whatsoever. Saying it sucked was an understatement.
 

Hero of Lime

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Jun 3, 2013
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The only surgery I've had was to remove a benign tumor off of my face several years ago. I was left awake and shot with so much anesthetic that I could feel the knife literally cutting my flesh, yet it did not hurt, that was awesomely creepy.

It left me with a scar that did not heal till just a year ago or so, but it was always a nice conversation piece.
 

Best of the 3

10001110101
Oct 9, 2010
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Had a cyst and stye removed from my left eye lid not long ago. Went pretty much according to plan. I had the infection for about 6 months to be honest, but the time the operation rolled around, the worst of it had burst open and oozed out of the eye lid itself so there wasn't as much to do.

Funny thing was the surgeon was the mother of a friend who I used to play badminton against in tournaments. I was thinking to myself as I was being put under "shit, she's got a scalpel, did I beat her son or not?! Shit!?!" But of course it all went fine.

After the surgery my eye lid and everything surrounding it was about 10 times it's normal size but over the course of 3 days subsided and returned to near normal.
 

ClockworkPenguin

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Mar 29, 2012
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I had my tonsils removed when I was 4. There was nothing wrong with them, but they where taking my adenoids out and thought 'Hey, whilst we've got him open, lets yank out these buggers as well'.

Because as you say, general aesthetic is basically like time travel from the patients perspective, I had no idea a surgery had taken place and for years was convinced they had sucked my tonsils out through the IV tube.
 

Combustion Kevin

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Nov 17, 2011
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I remember having eye-surgery on my right eye from a suspiciously friendly surgeon.
like, "something ain't right bout this guy"kinda friendly.

then again, I heard he won some sorta prize a short time ago, so I was probably just paranoid.
 

Heronblade

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Apr 12, 2011
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The last and only time I had to go in for surgery I was ten, and frankly I don't recall much.

My good friend and I were stick fighting with a pair of large branches we were using as crude quarterstaves (not our brightest idea), at one point we apparently charged each other. I say apparently because I regained consciousnessa bit later face down in the grass with air entering my nostrils from an unusual direction. After shocking the hell out of my mother and her friend, the former whisked me off. It wasn't long before they stuck me under and I woke up with about forty small stitches in my face.
 

MisterGobbles

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Nov 30, 2009
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A couple months ago I had to get a cancerous tumor removed that was on the bottom of my left pelvic area, so I had to have that entire area of bone taken out. Not fun. Given how large the surgery was though, it was surprisingly pleasant except for EXTREMELY incompetent nurses when I went to rehab. They had no idea what to do with me and treated me like I had a hip replacement (which led to excruciating pain in some instances where I had to be moved).
 

MetalDooley

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Feb 9, 2010
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Let me see

Age 8 I had my adenoids removed as I had a lot of trouble breathing through my nose.Was a pretty straightforward op from what I recall.I did ruin several pillowcases from nosebleeds for a few days afterwards though

Age 16 I had surgery on my left knee to repair the damage caused by several injuries.This was much more of a pain in the arse as I couldn't walk without crutches for about 3 months and spent 6 weeks in the orthopedic hospital getting intensive physio.Still got me off school for a good while

Age 24 I had a cyst removed from my left testicle which luckily turned out to be benign.This was the easiest op I've had despite the area it was being performed on.I went into the hospital in the morning and was home that evening.I was understandably a bit tender for a few days though

Age 25 I had surgery to repair the 2 of tendons in my left hand that I managed to nearly sever in a drunken broken glass incident.Again this one was a pain as I couldn't use my left hand for about a month afterwards.I must say this one gave me newfound respect for people who have lost a limb as even the most basic task becomes much more difficult with only one hand

Hmm I was on a run of surgery every 8 years for a while there.Luckily haven't required surgery for anything in the last 10 though