Getting port taken out
I get mine out next week and wonder if it hurts
Hugs Lynda
Comments
-
I had my old port
taken out and and a new one put in on the opposite side, a few weeks ago. They used a local, and putting in the new one was traumatic, with all the pushing and pulling etc etc, but taking the old one out was no big deal. I think it took all of 5 minutes, including the shots for the local numbing.
Hope it goes easy for you too,
kathleen0 -
Infusion portkayandok said:I had my old port
taken out and and a new one put in on the opposite side, a few weeks ago. They used a local, and putting in the new one was traumatic, with all the pushing and pulling etc etc, but taking the old one out was no big deal. I think it took all of 5 minutes, including the shots for the local numbing.
Hope it goes easy for you too,
kathleen
Just wondering if your port goes up into your neck. Mine was put into the external jugular vein and then it migrated around until it looks like a candy cane now. Kind of freaked me out at first but so far, so good.0 -
I had a port in my abdomenLaundryQueen said:Infusion port
Just wondering if your port goes up into your neck. Mine was put into the external jugular vein and then it migrated around until it looks like a candy cane now. Kind of freaked me out at first but so far, so good.
and when my doc started to take it out my body had engulfed it in a web-like material. He really had to work to get it out. I told him that since he had removed so many things from my body it was trying to hold on to whatever it could. Didn't really hurt though.
Karen0 -
: )kikz said:I had a port in my abdomen
and when my doc started to take it out my body had engulfed it in a web-like material. He really had to work to get it out. I told him that since he had removed so many things from my body it was trying to hold on to whatever it could. Didn't really hurt though.
Karen
Karen
You made me laugh because I would say something like you did under the circumstances!0 -
I'm on port number 2 (firstazgrandma said:mine is in my right chest
mine is in my right chest area
I'm on port number 2 (first one eroded thru the skin like giving birth to an alien baby) and I think I'm going to keep it until (if) I pass the 2 year NED mark. Two years is the first big milestone with OC.
Carlene0 -
Easy Procedure
Lynda,
I had my port removed back in January. My doctor used a local and sedation for the procedure. When I woke up I felt great and had absolutely no pain as it healed. Believe me, with everything you have gone through with treatments, this will seem quite easy!0 -
must be okSouth Jersey said:Easy Procedure
Lynda,
I had my port removed back in January. My doctor used a local and sedation for the procedure. When I woke up I felt great and had absolutely no pain as it healed. Believe me, with everything you have gone through with treatments, this will seem quite easy!
It must be ok to do it in the office, his nurse says he takes out 2 to 3 a week .I hate to be sedated anyway, when i got it put in all i had was the novacaine
Thanks to all of you for truly caring
I feel you all are a second family
Hugs Lynda0 -
Good luck
I am sure this will be over in no time. Treat yourself to something nice afterwards, you deserve it.0 -
Thanks to Hissy Fitz and ALL!
Carlene,
due to picking your virtual brain for months, I didn't suffer from "shock and awe" when my own Bard PowerPort (right jugular) went the same route. Since YOU had a new port placed on the left side, I didn't blink an eye when that was suggested. Wanted you to know that your information about this provided me with such relief and peace. Must have startled my Docs -- hah!
On a nursing forum, I read that the 3 palpitation points on the Bard are considered a design flaw by some, but I rather think it was a CT nurse who didn't follow exact protocol (which led to the erosion). Did you have any opinions on what caused yours to erode? Regardless, my new port (left jugular) is an Xcela Power Injectable Port, and it doesn't have that design, so here's hoping this works for a long time.
kayandok and azgrandma and South Jersey:
You all did this (removal or placement) with a local? You are braver men than I, Gungas Din! General for me, all 3 times (right port placement, right port removal and then left port placement). Due to the right-side erosion, the left one couldn't be placed until the cultures for the right side removal came back consistently negative.
LaundryQueen,
not sure if you're talking about the left side? The right jugular is a nice straight shot, but the left jugular does curve, making it a slightly trickier procedure (or so I was told). My left one (all of 4 days old) is looking good so far. I'm supposed to take the bandage off today, but I'm feeling wimpy!
kikz,
my IP port is still "in", and when it makes its presence known, I wonder if I'm feeling your web growing! But see? Now that won't freak me out if it happens.
Thanks to all, on this thread and elsewhere, for sharing your experiences.0 -
Tea Lurker....TeaLurker said:Thanks to Hissy Fitz and ALL!
Carlene,
due to picking your virtual brain for months, I didn't suffer from "shock and awe" when my own Bard PowerPort (right jugular) went the same route. Since YOU had a new port placed on the left side, I didn't blink an eye when that was suggested. Wanted you to know that your information about this provided me with such relief and peace. Must have startled my Docs -- hah!
On a nursing forum, I read that the 3 palpitation points on the Bard are considered a design flaw by some, but I rather think it was a CT nurse who didn't follow exact protocol (which led to the erosion). Did you have any opinions on what caused yours to erode? Regardless, my new port (left jugular) is an Xcela Power Injectable Port, and it doesn't have that design, so here's hoping this works for a long time.
kayandok and azgrandma and South Jersey:
You all did this (removal or placement) with a local? You are braver men than I, Gungas Din! General for me, all 3 times (right port placement, right port removal and then left port placement). Due to the right-side erosion, the left one couldn't be placed until the cultures for the right side removal came back consistently negative.
LaundryQueen,
not sure if you're talking about the left side? The right jugular is a nice straight shot, but the left jugular does curve, making it a slightly trickier procedure (or so I was told). My left one (all of 4 days old) is looking good so far. I'm supposed to take the bandage off today, but I'm feeling wimpy!
kikz,
my IP port is still "in", and when it makes its presence known, I wonder if I'm feeling your web growing! But see? Now that won't freak me out if it happens.
Thanks to all, on this thread and elsewhere, for sharing your experiences.
I thought
Tea Lurker....
I thought from the get-go that my first port was placed too shallowly. I told my doctor so at the time, and he dismissed my concerns by saying, "You're just thin in that area, so it's more noticeable."
I was reading over all my medical records the other day and came across the notation from one of my visits that said, essentially, that I thought my port was eroding thru the skin, and how unlikely that was. Ha!
I really don't think it happens all the frequently, although it was one of the little "points" on my Power Port that poked thru my skin first. And within a matter of days, I had a dime-size hole in my chest.
Both my ports were placed under general anesthetic, but the "bad" one was taken out in the doctor's little in-house clinic, with only some shots of Novocaine. He did an alarming amount of tugging, too. Seems the first surgeon sewed the port down with permanent sutures and the guy who took it out uses stitches that disolve, so he did not expect so much resistance. I didn't like that part.
I'm glad my experience was useful and made you a little less freaked out. It is quite the shock, the alien port experience.
Carlene0 -
TeaLurker: my port is on theTeaLurker said:Thanks to Hissy Fitz and ALL!
Carlene,
due to picking your virtual brain for months, I didn't suffer from "shock and awe" when my own Bard PowerPort (right jugular) went the same route. Since YOU had a new port placed on the left side, I didn't blink an eye when that was suggested. Wanted you to know that your information about this provided me with such relief and peace. Must have startled my Docs -- hah!
On a nursing forum, I read that the 3 palpitation points on the Bard are considered a design flaw by some, but I rather think it was a CT nurse who didn't follow exact protocol (which led to the erosion). Did you have any opinions on what caused yours to erode? Regardless, my new port (left jugular) is an Xcela Power Injectable Port, and it doesn't have that design, so here's hoping this works for a long time.
kayandok and azgrandma and South Jersey:
You all did this (removal or placement) with a local? You are braver men than I, Gungas Din! General for me, all 3 times (right port placement, right port removal and then left port placement). Due to the right-side erosion, the left one couldn't be placed until the cultures for the right side removal came back consistently negative.
LaundryQueen,
not sure if you're talking about the left side? The right jugular is a nice straight shot, but the left jugular does curve, making it a slightly trickier procedure (or so I was told). My left one (all of 4 days old) is looking good so far. I'm supposed to take the bandage off today, but I'm feeling wimpy!
kikz,
my IP port is still "in", and when it makes its presence known, I wonder if I'm feeling your web growing! But see? Now that won't freak me out if it happens.
Thanks to all, on this thread and elsewhere, for sharing your experiences.
TeaLurker: my port is on the right side & I'm pretty sure the last inch of it is NOT in the external jugular anymore. As long as it still works, I am not gonna worry about it. I have the Bard PowerPort & I can imagine how those little points could erode thru the skin--ick!
LQ0
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