Anything I should be aware of: having port removed later on?
Anything I should know to better heal after port removal?
Life seems a "little" different once you've been thru this sheet doesn't it?
......steve
Comments
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Hey Steve!
The port removal
Hey Steve!
The port removal is a piece of cake after everything else you have been through. Mine was done under sedation and in the OR, some have theirs out in the office.
It was sore for about a week but nothing compared to the other surgeries. CONGRATS on this milestone!!!!!
Kathy0 -
After problems I had with PICCs (cos port stopped working)khl8 said:Hey Steve!
The port removal
Hey Steve!
The port removal is a piece of cake after everything else you have been through. Mine was done under sedation and in the OR, some have theirs out in the office.
It was sore for about a week but nothing compared to the other surgeries. CONGRATS on this milestone!!!!!
Kathy
I don't take nothing for granted tho from what I already read here, this should be nothing. Thanks for quick,supportive response Kathy!!!!0 -
Good luck Steve!
Most people seem to have an easy time with port removal. Me...I am 3 months out and it is still very bothersome where the stitches were tied off. Seems they didn't dissolve.That is NOT unusual for me, though. You'll do fine Steve.Good riddance foreign objects!
-Pat0 -
I'm with Pat I'm about 2Jaylo969 said:Good luck Steve!
Most people seem to have an easy time with port removal. Me...I am 3 months out and it is still very bothersome where the stitches were tied off. Seems they didn't dissolve.That is NOT unusual for me, though. You'll do fine Steve.Good riddance foreign objects!
-Pat
I'm with Pat I'm about 2 months out & my incision has not healed completely. I hope you have better luck with yours.
Mike0 -
It was a big day.....
My port stayed thru both of my cancers, and I was even (after MUCH pushing of the hospital staff...) fed thru it when my bowel obstructed...
I had an easy time, although because of it's location and type, I was under (maybe conscious sedation...I don't remember), and it was done as an outpatient procedure. I waited till it healed, and then started applying Vitamin E oil so that the scar would be less noticable. (I did this with my 'up-and-down' scar, and my breast cancer lumpectomy scars, too). It was in a prominent place on my right chest wall, but unless I point it out, it can't be seen. This was especially important for me, because I wear V necklines, and it shows.
Congrats on the 'graduation'! I always said that this was a sign that the cancer COULD NOT return!
Hugs, Kathi0 -
Ask your doctor....Jaylo969 said:Good luck Steve!
Most people seem to have an easy time with port removal. Me...I am 3 months out and it is still very bothersome where the stitches were tied off. Seems they didn't dissolve.That is NOT unusual for me, though. You'll do fine Steve.Good riddance foreign objects!
-Pat
He/she can possibly remove the remaining stitches...they did that with my underarm ones that didn't dissolve completely from my breast cancer surgery. (I kept 'shaving' them when I did my armpits...lol!)
Hugs, Kathi0 -
All good for me
I've had two ports removed -- both times under local or no (?!) anesthetic. (It's like childbirth -- my mind blocked that one out a little). Minor discomfort for a day or two afterwards and then 100% fine. I realize everyone's experience is different, and I'm not trying to sound like some macho hero (heaven know I appreciate the odd anesthetic or two) -- but I just want to let you know that there is a range of experiences out there -- and I certainly hope and pray you are on the happy/easy end of the spectrum.
Tara0 -
biggest worry was after all I'd been thru, this would do me intaraHK said:All good for me
I've had two ports removed -- both times under local or no (?!) anesthetic. (It's like childbirth -- my mind blocked that one out a little). Minor discomfort for a day or two afterwards and then 100% fine. I realize everyone's experience is different, and I'm not trying to sound like some macho hero (heaven know I appreciate the odd anesthetic or two) -- but I just want to let you know that there is a range of experiences out there -- and I certainly hope and pray you are on the happy/easy end of the spectrum.
Tara
but here I am at home, hurting a bit with tape all across my left chest(thats what my percocet/vicodin is for,when needed)so I'll rest a few days, exercise my legs til I can do arms again and then get on as best I can with living as we all strive to do. Its been about a year for me since Dx and I plan on taking up computer space here for another 30-50 years so get used to me. I receive tons of stuff via email from all sorts of sites pertaining to cancer research being currently done and periodically i'll tell about something promising/interesting; nanotechnology is to me a very promising field of study....Hope all doing as well as can be with the future being brighter......steve
Thats whats so great about this site: in addition to moral support, people share their experiences so others can learn and be less scared as this has been the most frightful trip I've ever been on.0 -
surgery
It is surgery and hurts when it is removed. Wish mine had not been done in the office. After 3 years it is still a little tender there. That being said, I did have problems while the port was in and that was the reason it was removed. Just follow your docs advice. What else can we do? If you trust your doc, he knows more that any of us. Jo Ann0 -
Good job, Steve! It soundscoloCan said:biggest worry was after all I'd been thru, this would do me in
but here I am at home, hurting a bit with tape all across my left chest(thats what my percocet/vicodin is for,when needed)so I'll rest a few days, exercise my legs til I can do arms again and then get on as best I can with living as we all strive to do. Its been about a year for me since Dx and I plan on taking up computer space here for another 30-50 years so get used to me. I receive tons of stuff via email from all sorts of sites pertaining to cancer research being currently done and periodically i'll tell about something promising/interesting; nanotechnology is to me a very promising field of study....Hope all doing as well as can be with the future being brighter......steve
Thats whats so great about this site: in addition to moral support, people share their experiences so others can learn and be less scared as this has been the most frightful trip I've ever been on.
Good job, Steve! It sounds like you did well. I really appreciate all the cancer info you post for us. I can't believe you are already posting after your port removal!0 -
As long as I don't lean to the left, Anne,AnneCan said:Good job, Steve! It sounds
Good job, Steve! It sounds like you did well. I really appreciate all the cancer info you post for us. I can't believe you are already posting after your port removal!
physically, not politically, I'm allright but I also just took a percocet as pain is annoying,especially if I stretch left arm or left side so I try to minimize that. I should have chosen a different name for myself, such as ColoCant as in colorectal cancer can't beat me!!!!!
I've always enjoyed reading nonfiction (majored in history with minor in sociology, BA 1973))so just as I started researching lungs when Dxed with COPD in 2000, so now I'm into learning what I can (and I'm not science-oriented)about CRC and cancer in general. I get alot of synopses of research about to be published in scholarly,scientific,medical-type journals and magazines, some of which is way to medicalese (try 7thspace.com for starters and click on the medical news section---see what I mean)but thats the way I am.
Thanking all for taking the time to respond.......steve0 -
Port
I had mine removed about a month after chemotherapy ended. After two weeks or so I never gave it another thought, until today (it has been months) when the 3/4" scar itched a little. Other than that it has been a non-issue.
What a great feeling, no?0
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