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-   -   Going in Monday for my hernia operation. (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/682216-going-monday-my-hernia-operation.html)

azasadny 06-13-2012 06:43 AM

Hope you mend quickly!!

vonsmog 01-18-2016 04:49 PM

Well just got home from the hospital after getting hernia surgery on the other side. I hope this one heals as fast as the one I had done in 2012!

billybek 01-18-2016 06:44 PM

Where there is one, there is often another!
Another mesh and plug?

johnkszabo 01-18-2016 06:56 PM

Had it done in August 2015 . No problems at all, in fact I drove my car that afternoon. A little discomfort for a few days, and back in the gym in two weeks for some light workouts. The doctor told me I was crazy,but who cares I am 54 and believe in riding the ride of life. Best of luck to you , and please score a goal soon for me. Best John Szabo

vonsmog 01-19-2016 05:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by billybek (Post 8963193)
Where there is one, there is often another!
Another mesh and plug?

Yep, same as the last one! I'm not going to take the heavy pain meds this time, as they make me feel like a zombie who can't take a dump! After a week of no BM I was worse off from being stuffed up, than from the operation! So I am a bit sore today, but I am going to try and tough it out. Wife is babying me quite well, and no need to do much of anything. My neighbor even cleared my driveway this morning of 8" of snow! I Will have to buy him a nice bottle of wine!

GH85Carrera 01-19-2016 06:15 AM

My BIL had a hernia operation. He said it was not bad. Then he sneezed. Then he was ready for morphine. Don't sneeze!

Charles Freeborn 01-19-2016 06:41 AM

Double mesh repair about 20 years ago. Very early days of laparoscopic method. Not a single problem since. Brother and one sister have had it too - runs in the family. Take it easy for a few weeks.

Evans, Marv 01-19-2016 08:53 AM

Had one side done in '92 and the other side was noticeable at the time. The doc told me to let him know when it bothered me enough & he would schedule the other side. Finally about ten years later, I told him it was time so had it done. Interesting to me was the difference in how it was done. With the first one, two girls came in and shaved me and erected a sort of curtain at my waist. The doc & an associate came in and said he was giving me a local - which he did. After a while he poked around asking me if I felt anything. I told him I didn't, and he said he would begin. So he did his thing and we chatted and joked back & forth until he said he was done. For the second one, I thought I'd ask for a mirror to watch. The doc said he was giving me something to relax me, which (I think) totally knocked me out. The next thing I knew I woke up and he was finished. I was disappointed about not being able to ask about the mirror.

Reg 01-20-2016 06:10 PM

I have one. Some say just go to hospital for day surgery and be home that night while others say Shouldice as it is close by to me (2hr away) and world renowned and fix without the mesh, but they hold you for three days and assembly line plus old school care. I am the guy who hates hospitals and no surgery since tonsils at 10. Any more opinions?

Evans, Marv 01-20-2016 06:59 PM

Hope Von's doing OK and progressing. I imagine he's doing the special roll to get on & off the bed at this point. Reg, you should just listen to your doctor and your body to decide when to get yours done. Sometimes you just have to break down and face the music. I always looked at these sort of things with the idea it will be in the past decently soon.

Scott R 01-20-2016 07:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Evans, Marv (Post 8963772)
Had one side done in '92 and the other side was noticeable at the time. The doc told me to let him know when it bothered me enough & he would schedule the other side. Finally about ten years later, I told him it was time so had it done. Interesting to me was the difference in how it was done. With the first one, two girls came in and shaved me and erected a sort of curtain at my waist. The doc & an associate came in and said he was giving me a local - which he did. After a while he poked around asking me if I felt anything. I told him I didn't, and he said he would begin. So he did his thing and we chatted and joked back & forth until he said he was done. For the second one, I thought I'd ask for a mirror to watch. The doc said he was giving me something to relax me, which (I think) totally knocked me out. The next thing I knew I woke up and he was finished. I was disappointed about not being able to ask about the mirror.

I had mine done in 92' as well at Swedish Hospital here in Denver. I was allowed to shave myself; girlfriend at the time that drove me there offered to do it as well. :) But I was given full anesthesia, had the mesh done(GireTex) and "I have a large scar to this day.

Sorry to say that in the end it was terribly painful during recovery. I was a junior mechanic at Lexus during this time and I was out for three weeks. When I returned I would be standing under my rack and sweating from the pain of standing for more than 10 mins.

No pain meds available to me as I am an addict. But I doubt it would have mattered much. I understand they do this lapriscoply? (sp) It has to better, it just has to be. Sorry for the downer story.

pavulon 01-21-2016 12:16 AM

Getting it fixed vs waiting is a calculated risk.

While a bit unusual, hernias can "incarcerate" the fat and/or bowel they contain. The trouble with incarcerated hernias is that the tissue contained in the hernia loses adequate blood supply. If that happens, surgery gets much more urgent/emergent and can result in the need for a bowel resection (possibly a colostomy) if big enough and left too long. Urgent/emergent surgery is not ideal for anyone and even less so for people with health problems that need to be managed well before, during and after surgery.

The loss of life quality is also something to consider as are the risks of having the surgery. Let's not talk about the price of going to the hospital as everyone knows that is a can of worms.

The techniques for fixing hernias are situation and surgeon specific.

I fully understand not wanting surgery. Just want folks to appreciate the potential consequences of losing the gamble.


Quote:

Originally Posted by Reg (Post 8965938)
I have one. Some say just go to hospital for day surgery and be home that night while others say Shouldice as it is close by to me (2hr away) and world renowned and fix without the mesh, but they hold you for three days and assembly line plus old school care. I am the guy who hates hospitals and no surgery since tonsils at 10. Any more opinions?


porsche tech 01-21-2016 02:24 AM

X2 on laparoscopic! I've had both ways, both out patient surgery. The first side was the full fledged cut and it took two or three weeks to get over it. Other side, years later was laparoscopic. Had it done on a Friday and played golf on Saturday a week later. Both use mesh but laparoscopic goes all the way across both sides.--Dave

billybek 01-21-2016 04:12 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Reg (Post 8965938)
I have one. Some say just go to hospital for day surgery and be home that night while others say Shouldice as it is close by to me (2hr away) and world renowned and fix without the mesh, but they hold you for three days and assembly line plus old school care. I am the guy who hates hospitals and no surgery since tonsils at 10. Any more opinions?

With every repair, there is a possibility of complications. I have had one side done twice and left side once. If I had to do it all over again, I would be paying the premium over workers comp and traveling from Calgary to the Shouldice clinic for this surgery. You being right next door to it would seem a no brainer to me.
Regardless of where or what method you choose, it will more than likely be better than it is now!
Good luck with your repair.

Ziggythecat 01-21-2016 03:17 PM

I'm surprised that no one's Doctor used a local anesthetic post procedure.
I've had two, about 4 years apart, and on both occasions, a thin catheter was inserted along the cut, and I was given a golf ball size rubber ball, I kept in a bathrobe pocket, filled with what I guess is lidocaine.
The ball automatically fed the anesthetic, and collapsed around itself when finished in 3 or 4 days.
I was basicly numb around the incision, and I still have all the oxycodone pills they prescribed, and recovered almost pain free , without narcotics.
After the 4 days, I pulled the catheter out, easily enough.

This isn't new technology, as I had my first in 2007.

This link explains some more.

https://www.marshfieldclinic.org/specialties/anesthesia/anesthesiology-nerve-block

Reg 01-21-2016 03:36 PM

Thx for the replies folks. Any of the Pelicans who read this who do not have a hernia remember to lift properly and get help if it's too heavy!
The feeling for me is sort of like a mild tooth ache (only south!) or sort of like the after feel of getting kicked in the nuts back in grade school.
I also have some nerve damage going on as I have some numbness in areas around the groin. :(

pavulon 01-21-2016 04:17 PM

A fair number of insurance carriers have no interest in reimbursing hospitals for those elastomeric (or other sorts of) pumps...and the manufacturers won't give them away.

Did google or personal experience lead you to the Marshfield Clinic website for the link?


Quote:

Originally Posted by Ziggythecat (Post 8967041)
I'm surprised that no one's Doctor used a local anesthetic post procedure.
I've had two, about 4 years apart, and on both occasions, a thin catheter was inserted along the cut, and I was given a golf ball size rubber ball, I kept in a bathrobe pocket, filled with what I guess is lidocaine.
The ball automatically fed the anesthetic, and collapsed around itself when finished in 3 or 4 days.
I was basicly numb around the incision, and I still have all the oxycodone pills they prescribed, and recovered almost pain free , without narcotics.
After the 4 days, I pulled the catheter out, easily enough.

This isn't new technology, as I had my first in 2007.

This link explains some more.

https://www.marshfieldclinic.org/specialties/anesthesia/anesthesiology-nerve-block


Ziggythecat 01-21-2016 04:31 PM

Google got me there, no personal experience.

vonsmog 01-21-2016 05:10 PM

Well it has been a few days and still have some pain when walking and I thought I was going to die after I sneezed! But I can feel it getting better and I have not taken any of the prescribed pain meds, just over the counter stuff. Hope to be back on my feet in the next few days.

Ziggythecat 01-21-2016 05:53 PM

Good to hear.
You'll feel the occasional twinge from time to time, when you least expect it, for a while, just as a souvieneer ��


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