Results from Surgery

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pinky104
pinky104 Member Posts: 574 Member

I had my surgery on 4/6.  I was in the hospital 6 days and am just finally now feeling like returning to the land of the living and writing about what happened.  My GYN/onc. got in there and immediately checked the type of cancer I had with a biopsy, and sure enough, it was a return of my UPSC which I had 7 years ago.  It was the same mass he'd checked for a period of a year with repeated scans from 2014-15, the one he'd said couldn't be cancer because cancer always grows and this hadn't.

The cancer had wrapped itself right around my ascending colon.  He called in a gastro surgeon and they both operated on me.  They did a resection of my ascending colon which went up into my small intestine.  They had to remove the ileocecal valve, which is the valve between the small and large intestines, in doing this.  I'd been feeling for years like my incisional hernia repair from my first surgery had failed, but I had multiple different doctors check it out and none could feel a hernia.  Well, it seems the small intestine grew into the mesh placed in me during my 2012 hernia repair and got all tangled up in there.  They had to do another resection of my small intestine at that spot to get the whole mess out.  So now I have two sections of intestines that were cut apart and stapled back together with titanium staples after removing the bad stuff.  The gastro guy then "built me a whole new abdominal wall" with a newer infection-resistant mesh.  So now the mesh is in the abdominal wall where it shouldn't get intestines stuck in it any more.  I forgot to mention that with the cancer wrapped around the ascending colon, they also found the cancer growing into the muscle and toward the bone of my right hip.  They removed what they could, but they couldn't get it all out of the muscle.  I had a lot of pain getting my right leg in and out of bed after surgery, and it still isn't pain-free yet.  Chemo and possibly radiation will be done to try to get the rest.  Last summer, I got numbness in my right thigh. I went thru a neurological work-up where the neurologist concluded that I was wearing clothes that were too tight.  He said it would go away in about 6 mos. if I stopped doing whatever I was doing to irritate the nerve, but it hadn't gone away by the time of surgery. I asked my GYN/onc if the mass could be pressing on the nerve, and he told me he'd seen it happen before.  Apparently, that is what happened. He told me if he operated there, I'd be numb for life afterwards.  In a way, that's good as I can't feel the Lovenox shots I have to give myself there every other day.  I also was having really bad muscle cramps in various sites around the body, especially my legs, for several years.  I had started seeing a neurosurgeon and was getting epidural pain shots for back pain.  He told me to take potassium either in pill form or  to have a banana every day to get rid of the cramps.  I took two and then three potassium pills plus a banana and still had the cramps. Interestingly, the cramps are gone after the surgery. 

Now, I'm dealing with trying to get my bowel function going properly.  The day I went home from the hospital, I had black diarrhea 5 times before I left.  My GYN/onc had warned my husband that the diarrhea could persist for the rest of my life and I might be on Immodium for it all the time.  I had 3 episodes of it after getting home, and now I'm getting bound up and I'm not even allowed to be on the Immodium until I heal.  I'm trying to drink a lot, but I've been put on Lasix for excessive fluid build-up in my feet, so that's probably affecting how my intestines are working. 

Now, I'm getting bloodwork because of being on Lasix and bloodwork for being on Lovenox on different scheduled days, plus I'm scheduled for bloodwork for my oncologist at the hospital where I got my chemo before (the hospital where I'd worked) so he can get working on preparing me for chemo.  It looks like I'm going to have Carboplatin and Taxol again because they are considered to have worked the last time, plus I may need radiation, too, which I didn't have before.  I was stage IVb when I had my first surgery in May, 2010.

I'm just so glad to be home, although I can't sleep in my own bed because it's too tall for me to get in and out of now with my sore belly and leg.  The hospital was just horribly noisy at night.  The nurses or techs were in the room at least every 2 hours.  I'm a very light sleeper, so they always disturbed me.  I had a roommate with probable Alzheimer's one night who was at the hospital trying to find her mother, who had died earlier in March, and was going to call her father, who had died 16 years before, to come and take her home.  The hospital had her strapped into bed and she didn't like being held prisoner for her "one" day of confusion.  She'd been to the hospital two times in the last two weeks looking for her dead mother.  Another roommate had a history of ovarian cancer, and when they'd found a cyst on her colon, they'd thought it was back.  In repairing it, they had unknowingly perforated her bowel.  When she'd returned for a repair, they'd done it again.  She'd finally ended up in the ICU with a bad infection.  She had drains coming out of her which stunk pretty badly at times.  I don't know which of us was worse, me with my diarrhea or her with her drains.  She was a very nice person, though, and I was glad to have met her.

Thank you all for your replies to my previous posting from before surgery.

 

Comments

  • Lou Ann M
    Lou Ann M Member Posts: 996 Member
    edited April 2017 #2
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    What a terrible time

    You have really been through a rough time.  Hoping for quick healing now.  Sorry that they couldn't get it all after all you had to go through.  I had an open bowel resection a year and a half ago and it just amazed me that they could put me back together and I still work. I have to take stool softeners evertday so I don't strain my shorten digestive system.  I think roommates would have driven me over the edge.  So glad you are home and can rest and heal.

    Hugs and prayers, Lou Ann

  • pinky104
    pinky104 Member Posts: 574 Member
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    Thanks for replying, Lou Ann

    It's hard for me to keep track of who has had what done to them on this site, so thank you for replying.  The hospital told me to take Colace as a stool softener, but on the day I was discharged, after 5 bouts of diarrhea, the nurse said I should probably hold off on that a little while.  I didn't want to start them up yesterday and drive a half hour to my local hospital for blood work today with only one or two bathrooms on the way there in case they worked like they did in the hospital.  There, they only gave me one pill a day.  I took one tonight, but it hasn't started to work yet.  Maybe it'll work overnight.  How many pills do you take a day?  The bottle says 1-3.

    When I went up to the hospital lab today, I commented to the lab tech that I'd just had 2 sections of my intestines removed.  He was a slim, young guy who looked healthy and was probably in his mid 20's.  He told me that at age 16, he'd had to have his whole large intestine removed for ulcerative colitis.  I was amazed that a person could survive without one.  He said his small intestine does all the work. He'd previously had a colostomy but had gotten rid of that.  He said that at 16, he was facing death if he had the surgery and death if he didn't.  I'm sure that was a big load on the plate of a 16 year old kid.

  • cheerful
    cheerful Member Posts: 261 Member
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    I thought of you a lot during the day of your surgery and was very concerned and I also thought of you when you were in the hospital.  I am glad to hear that you are home and are recuperating.   Just take it easy and get the rest that you need.  It will take you a few weeks to recover from your surgery.  It is hard being at the hospital for a number of days as you do not get much sleep especially at night as there are people in the hallways talking plus the nurses come in the room at various times throughout the night so it is really hard to get any kind of sleep at all.

     Also, good luck with your chemo.  I will continue to keep you in my prayers.

    Hugs,

    Cheerful

    a/k/a Jane

  • Nellasing
    Nellasing Member Posts: 528 Member
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    So Sorry Pinky

    you really have been through it- glad you are home and sending prayers for complete and quick recovery!  (((HUGS)))

  • Soup52
    Soup52 Member Posts: 908 Member
    edited April 2017 #6
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    Oh Pinky, I'm so sorry that

    Oh Pinky, I'm so sorry that you have been through all of this. In a way it has been validating about all the pains you have had. I pray for your speedy recovery and on to chemo after. Please keep in touch when you feel up to it. Sending prayers and good thoughts!

  • TeddyandBears_Mom
    TeddyandBears_Mom Member Posts: 1,811 Member
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    Pinky, thanks very much for

    Pinky, thanks very much for the update. What an experience you have had. I hope you start to heal faster now that you are home. Please let us know how you are doing and when you start chemo. Sorry they couldn't get it all in surgery. There is still so much to learn about this sneaky cancer, darn it!

    Love and Hugs,

    Cindi

  • Lou Ann M
    Lou Ann M Member Posts: 996 Member
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    pinky104 said:

    Thanks for replying, Lou Ann

    It's hard for me to keep track of who has had what done to them on this site, so thank you for replying.  The hospital told me to take Colace as a stool softener, but on the day I was discharged, after 5 bouts of diarrhea, the nurse said I should probably hold off on that a little while.  I didn't want to start them up yesterday and drive a half hour to my local hospital for blood work today with only one or two bathrooms on the way there in case they worked like they did in the hospital.  There, they only gave me one pill a day.  I took one tonight, but it hasn't started to work yet.  Maybe it'll work overnight.  How many pills do you take a day?  The bottle says 1-3.

    When I went up to the hospital lab today, I commented to the lab tech that I'd just had 2 sections of my intestines removed.  He was a slim, young guy who looked healthy and was probably in his mid 20's.  He told me that at age 16, he'd had to have his whole large intestine removed for ulcerative colitis.  I was amazed that a person could survive without one.  He said his small intestine does all the work. He'd previously had a colostomy but had gotten rid of that.  He said that at 16, he was facing death if he had the surgery and death if he didn't.  I'm sure that was a big load on the plate of a 16 year old kid.

    Hi

    I usually take two,  that used to work just about right.  Right now I am having a real constipation problem.  Oxi for hip pain and Zofran for nausea because of radiation near my stomach.  Also having problems drinking enough water or anything.  Not eating also adds to that.  

    We all complain, but medicine sure is amazing as to what they can do now days.  The doctors get real good at putting us back together.

    Hugs and prayers, Lou Ann

    h

  • SandyD
    SandyD Member Posts: 130
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    Pinky, you've been through a heck of a lot!

    I hope that you're now on the road to healing. So sorry they couldn't get it all. Cancer stinks!

  • Kvdyson
    Kvdyson Member Posts: 789
    edited April 2017 #10
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    Pinky, I am so sorry to hear

    Pinky, I am so sorry to hear that you have gone through all of this but very thankful that you've come out the other side strong enough to give us an update. My heart goes out to you for all that you have been through with mis-diagnoses and delayed treatments. Hopefully this latest surgery will put you back on your feet and feeling strong enough to get through treatments again. Please keep us posted on how you are doing. Wishing you strength and healing. Kim

  • derMaus
    derMaus Member Posts: 558 Member
    edited April 2017 #11
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    Oh Pinky, what a saga you've

    Oh Pinky, what a saga you've had! I'm so sorry about all of this but thankful you're finally HOME. Hospitals are hellish and how one is ever expected to heal there is beyond me. I do love Lou Ann's comment about the doctors being good at putting us all back together, and am thankful that you have indeed been put back together and can now focus on rest and healing. Re: Colace, that didn't do much for me. MiraLax did a little too much; I felt like Goldilocks never getting the right mix. I finally settled on Senacot, which seems to be about right for my uses. I hope everything settles down for you soon! Best wishes, B