Showing posts with label complications. Show all posts
Showing posts with label complications. Show all posts

Sunday, October 03, 2004

Postop: walking and the prevention of surgical complications

When and why you have to start walking in the immediate postop recovery period is a concern I frequently see women "voicing" in the online forums. This tends to get short shrift in the pre-op teaching, other than a fleeting mention that you'll be up and walking "right away" after surgery.

Right away most likely means on the day of your surgery, a few hours after you get to your room from Recovery. Generally the order is written for you to "dangle" first and then, a few hours later, to get up and walk. This means that the first effort will simply be to sit on the edge of the bed with your feet hanging over the side. In itself, this is a minor production, and you'll have the help of your nurse getting all of your tubes (IV and catheter, at least) organized. Your nurse will show you how to use the bed controls to raise yourself, then swing your feet over and down from a sideways position so that you put less stress on your belly. This is a very effective and important technique that you'll be using in the weeks ahead, so take your time and use the help and coaching to get the hang of it. Your nurse should stay with you the whole time you're sitting up, since it may make you a bit woozy and light-headed.

Later, usually the evening of your surgery, you'll actually get out of bed and stand and walk a few steps. Sound scary? It's really not grim. You'll have your pain medication, and most nurses know to medicate you before you move around so you'll be prepared. You may want to hold a towel or small pillow to your belly to help with the sensation that it will fall out. This is an illusion from muscle weakness, but you'll feel more confident holding onto it. Standing up starts just like dangling, only you'll go all the way to standing up. Go ahead and stand up straight: there's nothing useful in walking hunched over and your back will appreciate the chance to stretch that good posture provides.

The first time you walk, you may only go a few steps across your room or down the hall. Each time you get up, it's a little easier to go a little further. By your next postop day, you may be ready to walk on your own, but do ask for someone to accompany you as long as you feel at all woozy.

So why is this so important? The most critical part of walking is that it helps to prevent the complications that can come from any surgery, and particularly abdominal surgery (and this applies to those whose surgeries used the vaginal route: the surgical site is in your abdomen, and that's what counts here). When our lungs are depressed from anesthesia and dried out from getting oxygen and we lie extra still in one position (as we do when under anesthesia and then later under pain meds), secretions can pool up in our lungs and make a perfect medium for bacterial growth. Pneumonias and loss of lung function can follow, so changing position, deep breathing and moving about are important measures to prevent this.

Another surgical complication is blood clots. These are caused by, again, lack of the normal movements that exercise our blood vessels and keep blood from pooling and clotting. Abdominal surgery makes us especially prone to blood clots, so your surgeon may order you to wear special elastic stockings or pneumatic leggings to help take over that blood vessel exercising when you're less active during the first operative day. As you move around more, the normal motions and muscular activity will resume this function. Still, it's important to move and stretch your legs every hour or so while you're in bed and to try to remember to never cross your legs or ankles while you're lying around (this constricts blood flow, too). The more often you walk, the more you're working to prevent blood pooling and the clots it can lead to.

Another big benefit to walking is the way it helps your guts to start working again. It's normal for abdominal surgery to cause our intestines to more or less shut down. They are cranky organs, and just don't like to be handled and disturbed. It may take a day or two for them to get over their snit. During that time, you'll find your doctor and nurses listening to your belly with a stethoscope and asking you if you've passed gas yet. Your diet will typically be very light at first, mostly clear things like jello and broth and fruit juices, so that you don't overload your nonfunctional guts. Walking will help stimulate your intestines to get back to work, and once they do so, it'll help keep things moving along. Many women find that the gas that builds up in non-functional guts is the greatest source of postop discomfort for them, and walking is the best way to keep it moving on its way. As you walk more and your guts work better, your appetite will recover and your diet will be advanced to more fulfilling foods. It's typical that you won't be discharged from the hospital till you pass gas, thus demonstrating returning bowel function. The more you walk, the sooner you'll be outta there, then. This is a worthy goal.

Once you're home, walking regularly will keep your guts moving despite the constipating influences of pain medications and inactivity. Walking is also the best, gentle exercise for rebuilding your stamina. The more you lie around and don't use your muscles, the weaker you get—strength is a real use it or lose it proposition. By walking regularly and for increasing duration and distance, we keep from losing ground and, safely, push ourselves to recover.

How much is enough? In the first week at home, just walking around the house to the bathroom and kitchen and sofa and bed will probably be enough. By the end of that week, though, you should be making brief forays outside--perhaps up the driveway or around the yard for a lap or two. By the end of the second week, women who have been hearty walkers before are doing blocks; those who may be in poor physical condition should still be able to walk a block or more at this point. So long as what you reach for is healthy fatigue, not exhaustion or extra soreness, you're on track for a healthy recovery. If you get sore or you don't feel refreshed after napping on your return, you need to back off a bit and give your body time to gather the additional resources to recover and be ready to progress again. For the first month, walking is your best exercise, and duration/distance, rather than speed or steepness of terrain, should be your goals.

Saturday, October 02, 2004

Postop: Should I call my doctor?

I see posting after posting in the online hyst forums describing all sorts of situations and asking this question. And the only possible answer is, invariably, yes.

Yes, if anything at all happens that worries you or makes you wonder whether or how your postop instructions apply, you should call your doctor.

Yes, you should call your doctor if it happens at 10 am on a weekday and yes, you should call your doctor if it happens at 1 am on Sunday. Every surgeon has a mechanism for taking calls and a relief on-call doctor who will be available if he is off. You may have to leave a message with an answering service and wait for a callback, but you can and should take your questions to a doctor. No one on a forum, no matter how well-educated or well-intentioned, has the information at hand to answer your questions safely and applicably. In fact, if your doctor or his on-call is in doubt because of the limitations of discussing things on the phone, he may ask you to come to the office or be seen in the Emergency Room just so that you can be evaluated more fully. Doctors understand the limitations of phone consultations; women on forums, however well-motivated they may be, tend not to.

"But I hate to disturb my doctor with what might be a silly question..." is an all-too-common response. Nonsense. You are paying the doctor for a service, and part of that service is postoperative supervision. Whether you have developed a complication requiring further treatment or whether your doctor failed to adequately instruct you on what to expect, the doctor is a contractor being paid for a specific service and you are entirely entitled to that full service for those big bucks.

There are things you can do to help make your call as effective as possible. First of all, before you even pick up the phone, jot down some notes. Write out as explicitly as possible what your worries or questions are. Include such background information as when you had your surgery, what surgery it was, what medications and hrt you are on (include when you last took them), what your temperature is or other pertinent information about your physical condition. Your doctor may take your call from a location where he doesn't have your chart or his notes available, and you don't want to rely upon his (crowded) memory for important details.

Doctors respond better to clear, objective information, not subjective responses. Saying in tears that "I feel totally horrible and I'm really worried!!!!" does not convey nearly as much helpful information to the doctor as "I am running a fever of 101, my head has been pounding for 6 hours despite taking [pain medication type and dose and time of last dose], and my incision looks red, puffy and is draining green pus that made a circle 1" in diameter on a dressing in the past 6 hours." The first comment will likely get a soothing response or a suggestion that you need an antidepressant; the second may see you with an office visit and an antibiotic prescription—very different results indeed.

So if you are describing your incision, you need to be prepared to report the following:

  • location
  • how long this has been going on/when you first noticed it
  • color: red, pale, normal skin tone?
  • temperature of the area: hot? same as surrounding tissues?
  • presence or absence of local swelling, feeling of area: hard? soft? hard lump with distinct edges? dimensions of lump in inches/cm?
  • sensation of area: hurts all the time? hurts when touched gently/pushed on? sharp pain or ache? burning pain or stabbing pain?
  • smell: no particular odor? medicinal? foul or rotting meat odor?
  • drainage description: clear pinkish-yellowish? bright red blood? old clotted blood? pus? green? yellow?
  • drainage amount: size of stain on dressing in [whatever] amount of time, how many times you've changed what type of pad or dressing in past [whatever] amount of time?
  • your temperature taken just before calling, as well as when you last took it and what it was then

If you think you are having hormonal problems, you need to be prepared to report the following:

  • what you are taking for hrt
  • when you take it and when you last took it
  • what specific symptoms you are having that you attribute to your hormones: hot flashes? mood swings? rash? swelling? headache? nausea?
  • for each symptom, further list: when it began, how many times you've had it, how long it lasts (for example: hot flashes started today, I have had 6 lasting 10-30 seconds each and each time more intense/causing heavier sweat or I have burst into tears inappropriately 4 times today and yelled at my kids when they really didn't deserve it twice)

By having this sort of information ready, you're giving your doctor the information he needs to identify and constructively deal with your problem, not your reaction to your problem. And that will make for a whole lot more satisfaction all around. And, hey, if it turns out to be something perfectly normal, then you have the reassurance and your doctor's learned a lesson about preparing you for what to expect that will benefit the next woman he treats. Everyone wins!