
i am really hoping that i can do the day surgery and have it all wrapped up on my days off.
Moderator: Orlion
Sounds more like a week off since you are on your feet all day.sgt.null wrote: i am really hoping that i can do the day surgery and have it all wrapped up on my days off.
WHAT SHOULD I EXPECT AFTER GALLBLADDER SURGERY?
Gallbladder removal is a major abdominal operation and a certain amount of postoperative pain occurs. Nausea and vomiting are not uncommon.
Once liquids or a diet is tolerated, patients leave the hospital the same day or day following the laparoscopic gallbladder surgery.
Activity is dependent on how the patient feels. Walking is encouraged. Patients can remove the dressings and shower the day after the operation.
Patients will probably be able to return to normal activities within a week's time, including driving, walking up stairs, light lifting and working.
In general, recovery should be progressive, once the patient is at home.
The onset of fever, yellow skin or eyes, worsening abdominal pain, distention, persistent nausea or vomiting, or drainage from the incision are indications that a complication may have occurred. Your surgeon should be contacted in these instances.
Most patients who have a laparoscopic gallbladder removal go home from the hospital the day after surgery. Some may even go home the same day the operation is performed.
Most patients can return to work within seven days following the laparoscopic procedure depending on the nature of your job. Patients with administrative or desk jobs usually return in a few days while those involved in manual labor or heavy lifting may require a bit more time. Patients undergoing the open procedure usually resume normal activities in four to six weeks.
Make an appointment with your surgeon within 2 weeks following your operation.
Sarge, I have got behind. So many posts, and the orange things tend to disappear so I don't know what I've looked at! So sorry to hear about the gall stone. A week off it seems to recover after surgery. Make the most of it!sgt.null wrote:i have a gall stone 10 mm. julie says that is the width of ten stacked dimes. see a surgeon tomorrow to find out what he wants to do.
other than that...
Murrin wrote:There'll be plenty of room for players if you feel like joining us.
Hi Menolly, hope the power is back on soon in your head and heart. 'Tis an excellent idea to get hold of an ebook, I did check my library but they didn't have a copy. But as I'm struggling to use the Kindle at the moment (RSI worse than usual), I'd prefer the hard copy. It'll probably turn up in the next couple of days and it's not like my name's Avatar and I'm scrounging around for reading material! (I'm taking the opportunity to try Midnight Tides again and then I'll start Earthsea). Anyway, thanks for the suggestions.Menolly wrote:Shaun, would you be willing to download and read a free. pdf file or ebook of AWoE, until your book arrives, so you can get started? Or maybe see if your library has a digital copy you can "check out?" You have already supported the author by purchasing the book; I see no reason why you should wait to begin if you have the time to do so.
Myself, I'm feeling...disconnected today. Hoping I find my balance again.
I still feel badly as it was a truly beautiful creature, but knowing the state of hospitals in this city, the likelihood of them having antivenin are slim-to-none... also I have a cat and two dogs, and there are children who play in our yard, and it was in our living room, not in a tree or somewhere outside. So all in all it seemed like the safest thing was to break its neck.Effaeldm wrote:deer, don't feel bad, risking human lives is hardly a better option. I've read it's virtually impossible for a human to be poisoned by them, they have to practically chew the victim deep in the backs of their mouths to apply poison, though that may be academic theory. But if that's actually so, perhaps you could spare them if any appear around again.
Don't apologize, you were taking care of your family and your pet family. I would have done EXACTLY the same thing.(if I had the couragedeer of the dawn wrote: I still feel badly as it was a truly beautiful creature, but knowing the state of hospitals in this city, the likelihood of them having antivenin are slim-to-none... also I have a cat and two dogs, and there are children who play in our yard, and it was in our living room, not in a tree or somewhere outside. So all in all it seemed like the safest thing was to break its neck.Sorry.