Thank you

LisaV_SG
on 11/28/16 3:37 pm
VSG on 12/01/16

I just want to say thank you to everyone who supported me the other day with my pre op diet. Still on it and it HAS gotten easier - with that being said it still sucks  BUT it's gotten better! No more pounding headaches. Getting suuuuper nervous for my surgery in three days (Thursday)  I hope it all goes well! ANY advice regarding surgery would be helpful  I appreciate you guys and your responses SO so much. And if you want to follow my surgery I'm going to do an instagram account with before/during/after pics, foods I'm eating, inspirational quotes, etc. If you want to follow its LisaV_SG . I'd love to follow any other accounts too and help support one another! Have a great night!

psychoticparrot
on 11/28/16 4:25 pm

Glad your headaches and hunger are under control. Pre-op week is never easy, but it becomes less difficult, thank goodness.

Here's a repeat of a post I've written several times before for posters asking for information regarding the surgery itself. For those who have seen it before, my apologies!

What follows is a list of everything I remember that happened on the day of surgery, supplemented by my husband's observations when I was too woozy to think straight. If you've been hospitalized before, you'll already be familiar with most of the details. If you've never had surgery, this list will give you as complete a picture as I can manage of what surgery day was like.

 

 

  • Once you go into the hospital, head to the admittance office and complete whatever paperwork they require. Bring ID, insurance info, a list of your current medications, a copy of advanced directives, and any other papers they will have required in advance.
  • After the initial paperwork is finished, you will be directed to the surgical unit waiting room.
  • Wait there until a nurse calls your name.
  • The nurse will take you to a curtained-off cubicle, which will have a gurney, a chair and a plastic bag for your clothes.
  • She or he will direct you to change into a hospital gown, put a surgical shower cap over your hair, and put on those ever-so-stylish hospital pressure socks (Their purpose is to help prevent blood clots in your legs from extended immobility.) The nurse will leave while you change. When you're dressed in your stunning new outfit, open the curtain, and wait for the nurse to come back.
  • The nurse will settle you onto the gurney in a semi-reclining position if you're not already there.
  • Wait around some more.
  • Another nurse will come in and take some blood draws from your arm. An IV port will be inserted (usually in your hand or arm) and fluids from the bag hanging on the IV pole next to your bed will be started to keep you hydrated. An oxygen monitor clip will be placed onto your fingertip. An automatic blood pressure cuff will be wrapped around your arm. All of these instruments will be attached to a machine that continuously measures your blood pressure, oxygen levels, and heart rate. It beeps a lot. Don't be alarmed. That machine just loves to beep.
  • At this point, if someone came with you to the hospital, he or she will be allowed to come in to keep you company.
  • Wait around some more.
  • More forms will be brought in for you to sign (liability releases -- just what you want to think about right before surgery. )
  • Wait around some more.
  • At some point, your anesthesiologist will visit you for a few minutes to tell you what he'll be using to keep you comfortable before, during, and after surgery.
  • When your surgeon is ready for you, they'll move you fast. Hug your loved ones. They'll be directed to a waiting room.
  • Your gurney will be wheeled out of the cubicle, down various corridors, and finally into the OR. It's very bright and cold in there. Ask for blankets if you're cold.
  • There will be lots of hustle and bustle around you as the team preps the instruments.
  • A little something relaxing will be injected into your IV. It's very soothing. Mmmmmmm.
  • Your surgeon will come in masked and gowned. He'll make sure you're you and say a few encouraging words.
  • An anesthesia mask will be placed over your face. You'll be told to breathe deeply. A few breaths later, you'll be out cold.
  • While you're under anesthesia, the surgical team will intubate you; that is, insert a narrow tube down your throat and into your trachea. This is a precautionary step to keep your airway open during surgery. If your surgeon wants a urinary catheter inserted, they'll do that too. I don't remember anything being said about a catheter in my case. If they used one, it was removed before I regained consciousness. Don't worry that you'll be too heavy for them to do this. They've done it a hundred times before.
  • You will wake up in the recovery room. You'll be very woozy. Your first coherent thought will be "I'm alive!" Then, "I did it! I'm sleeved!" These are very pleasant and reassuring thoughts!
  • At some point while still you're still woozy, the nurses will remove the intubation tube. It will feel a little weird but it won't hurt. Sometimes it's removed before you wake up. Your throat will feel very sore. It will take a few days until the soreness goes away.
  • You will have a drainage tube dangling from one of the small incisions in your abdomen. It shouldn't hurt, but it's kind of gross looking.
  • As if what you were wearing wasn't already sexy-looking enough, you'll find inflatable "pressure boots" wrapped around your lower legs. They automatically inflate and deflate to prevent blood clots in your legs.
  • Nurses will keep coming to you and asking in unnecessarily loud voices how you feel. Tell them if you feel nauseated or are in pain (you probably won't be; you'll still be flying high from the anesthesia). But if you find that you're in any discomfort, the nurses can inject meds into your IV to help you feel better.
  • When you're recovered enough to know what's going on around you and can be raised to a sitting position, they'll wheel you to your hospital room, where you'll rest for a little while. You'll still be hooked up to that beeping machine. It lives to beep. You will just have to endure it till the nurse comes in and fixes whatever is making it beep -- empty IV bags, gremlins, whatever. There will be a call button attached to your bed rail to call the nurses if you need them. Rest for a while and contemplate the future. You probably won't feel like reading, watching TV, or playing with your laptop. You'll still be a bit too woozy do much of anything. Over the next few hours, your alertness will increase and you'll feel pretty much like yourself again.
  • You will be given a plastic device called an Incentive Spirometer. It looks sort of like a small plastic pitcher with a short hose attached. Your nurse will show you how to use it. It's designed to help you breathe deeply despite the discomfort from your abdomen. You need to start breathing normally and deeply again to prevent pneumonia. You should use it several times an hour. You get to keep it for your very own and take home to use there.
  • About four hours or so after your surgery, nurses will come in and help you to your feet and guide you to the bathroom for your first walk and a very welcome bathroom break.
  • When you're back in bed, you'll probably sleep for a while.
  • You may have one of those push-button painkiller med dispensers. Use it if necessary. You'll feel stiff, and your incision sites will feel sore. You may have pain, especially in your shoulders, from the gas they used in the OR to inflate your abdomen. Sitting upright and walking frequently helps dispel this gas.
  • Nurses will come in at regular intervals to inject you with blood thinners and painkillers, check your IV, replace empty IV bags with full ones, and do other sundry chores.
  • Once you're fully awake, you can start to take charge of your own recovery. This is where the "walk, walk, walk" advice kicks in. Get up and walk around slowly and carefully in the hallway every half-hour or hour, whatever you can manage. You'll be glad you have your PJ bottoms on. You'll have to roll your IV pole along with you. Your sleep that night will be broken up by nurses taking your vital signs and administering medications. Use those breaks to take short walks before going back to sleep.
  • This next step was not done by my surgeon but is commonly performed the following morning. You'll be wheelchaired to a room where the surgeon or another doctor will give you a tiny amount of barium solution to drink while observing your new stomach on a fluoroscope to determine if there are any leaks along your incision line. Usually, the line holds just fine.
  • Back in your room, having passed the leak test, you'll be given two ounces of water to drink. It will take you a long, long time to get it down. Take heart. Your ability to drink liquids will increase dramatically over the next day or two as your stomach swelling starts to diminish. This is when the "sip, sip, sip" advice kicks in.
  • At some point during the day after the surgery, your surgeon will examine you and ask questions about how you're feeling. He'll then determine whether you can go home that day or need to stay one more night. Nearly everyone can go home the day after surgery.
  • If you're to be discharged that day, the nurses will remove the drainage tube. Sometimes you have to go home with it, in which case you'll be instructed how to take care of it. If they remove the tube in the hospital, it will feel very strange but shouldn't hurt. They'll start unhooking you from the infernal beeping machine, and the IV will be removed from your arm.
  • You'll get dressed in your own soft, comfortable clothes (choose wisely) and wait around some more.
  • A nurse will give you more forms to sign. They'll also go over a list of discharge instructions, which you will take home with you. These instructions tell you what you can and can't do in the first few weeks following surgery and when to call your surgeon should any complications crop up.
  • Wait around some more.
  • The nurses will help you into a wheelchair (don't bother telling them you can walk out; the hospital's liability insurance demands that you be wheeled out). They'll wheel you out to the entrance where your designated driver will pick you up and take you home. Use that pillow you remembered to put in the car to hold against your stomach to cushion it from bumps in the road.
  • When you get home, do a little victory dance in your head, go to bed, and take a nice, well-deserved, beepless nap. Then get busy recovering.

 

psychoticparrot

 

 

  "Live for what today has to offer, not for what yesterday has taken away."

Anita
on 11/28/16 6:46 pm

FABULOUS synopsis.......you definitely covered all the bases!!!

Good friends are like stars. 
You don't always see them but you always know they're there. 
 

 

 

LisaV_SG
on 11/30/16 4:54 am
VSG on 12/01/16

Wow thank you so much for the advice! Glad you have it broken down. I've had surgeries but only minor ones. (Tonsillectomy, wisdom teeth removal) but both I was under for I believe. I feel pretty prepared!

Joshua H.
on 11/30/16 10:59 am
VSG on 10/26/16

Just for more data points -- here is what was different about mine....

  • Both OR nurses visited me before the surgeon or anesthesiologist did
  • They injected me with the calming stuff, and things begin to get hazy on the rush to the OR
  • They had me stand and move from my gurney to the OR table and then I was knocked out (don't remember them verifying who I was in the OR)
  • I wake up several hours later to a couple nurses talking very loudly at me and offering me a pain pump
  • They move be from recovery to my room, hitting every corner and wall on the way -- I swear a lot
  • First coherent thing I remember saying is "I'm really glad I'm not dead."
  • I don't remember the intubation being removed
  • No Foley Catheter for me
  • I took my first walk (and bathroom break) 8 hours after getting to my room
  • I didn't have a barium test
  • First liquids were the morning after surgery.  1 oz max per hour.
  • I end up walking 7 miles in the hospital on the 2 days following my surgery
  • My discharge was 3 days after my surgery (standard practice for my surgeon)

 

Other than that -- I pretty much had the same experience as the parrot.  I used my pump 5 times in 3 days. 

AD_Jordan
on 11/28/16 10:08 pm

WOW! PyschoticParrot really gave a good summary!

My experience was very similar, with only a few exceptions. 

  • Once I got the the ER, I was only awake long enough for them to verify my name and what surgery I was having. They asked me to slide over onto the operating table, and then it was nap time.

I DID ask the nurse anesthetist to let me know when I was going under, because that helps me to stay calm when I wake up in the Recovery Room.

I also tend to have nausea when I'm coming out of anesthesia. They added a med to the IV to help me with this. (Nobody likes you to lose your cookies!)

      They removed my intubation tube while I was still snoozing. However, I DID still have a catheter, when I got up. Which made it difficult to try to walk.

    The nurse took it out in the morning.

Note: My surgery was delayed 4 hours, so the rest of the post-op steps were as well.

  • No drainage tube, no flouroscope. They apparently checked that in the OR.

I would heartily recommend bringing a pair of ear plugs to the hospital. The amount of beeping and the call bells that ring repeatedly until the nurse can arrive to silence them makes napping difficult.

And the pillow? YES!!

Best wishes for a great experience.

VSG on 11/15/16 . . . HW: +/- 265 . . . SW: 252 . . . CW: 187 (as of 5/22/17)

LisaV_SG
on 11/30/16 4:54 am
VSG on 12/01/16

Thank you!! 

Coppergirl
on 11/30/16 12:20 pm

One suggestion I have is to take a non-carbonated, sugar-free drink with you like the PowerAde zero or have someone bring you one after surgery if allowed by your doctor. Many people I have spoken with (including my daughter and I) have a hard time with zipping water while nauseous from the anesthesia. My surgeon allowed me to mix a tiny bit of the PowerAde Zero with the water. It was easier for me to stomach and created no issues as long as I sip, sip, sipped. Of course, confirm with your doctor/hospital that it is ok there.

Congrats!! It really just gets better and better from here!!

Started this journey 6/6/16 - 246.8lbs. SW 214 - 9/6/16 VSG. CW - 158. (9/15/17) Post VSG M1- 20, M2- 8.4 M3- 6.6 M4- 8 M5- 3.6 M6-5.8 M7- 1.5 M8- 1.5 GOAL - 142.

Never waste a second chance!!

Most Active
×