Yeah, you are right about the widespread effects... it kind of creeped up on me, first day wasn't too bad but it was downhill from there...Neck surgery may not damage as much actual tissue but it influences a way bigger part of the body. As in potentially all of it. Take it easy my friend.
Thanks Liza, and the pain was less today, but the opioid painkillers probably get the credit for that.Sorry to hear the pain has increased Rob, but yes i can imagine that would be reassuring to hear that is totally normal and to be expected. I hope you are feeling better soon.
Yep I have seen a lot of variability, and as to the anesthetic impact this one is about my worst. Yeah brain fog and pain, sometimes I think painkillers don't really reduce my pain all that much, they just keep me from complaining about it...Some surgeries knock you about more than others & I think it is often to do with how much anaesthetic you needed. Try to be patient, Rob & let your body recover. Bodies are clever things. Do you have any brain fog as well as pain?
Thanks Emily, TV is my entertainment right now. One good thing about it is that if I watch a good show I probably won't remember much so can watch it again soon.I think it will probably get a little bit worse before it gets better. Go easy on yourself Rob! Just take the time to sleep and rest and maybe buy a few newspapers or something to keep you going.
Thanks, I have decided not to take any more of the muscle relaxants while taking the painkillers. My painkiller is Norco, it contains hydrocodone, which I believe is an opioid. Hard for me to imagine getting hooked on this stuff, the sooner I can get off it the better.If you're taking opioid painkillers right now I repeat what Boymom said: be careful with muscle relaxants. Opioids suppress breathing activity. (As well as gut motility, but that's not as noticeable overnight...)
Wow, I hope it doesn't take that long... I know from research that sometimes it does. Not something doctors tell you about before surgery, none of mine anyway.I had general anaesthetic when I was 42 & it took me 6 weeks to recover from the brain fog.
Doing a lot of that, LOL.Tune out, Rob xo
Hope so, that seems to be my plan right now...Yes tv and eating whatever feels ok sounds about right for this recovery time!
Be happy you're 70 rather than 85: in elderly patients it can be much more severe and take up to a year. During which time they generally go to a nursing home and their old place gets sold off because everyone assumes it's plain old dementia.Wow, I hope it doesn't take that long... I know from research that sometimes it does. Not something doctors tell you about before surgery, none of mine anyway.
You are right, I've been reading a little about it. The post operative brain fog tends to get worse as we get older. Maybe a good reason to get any of these elective surgeries done as soon as we can... This is not something any doctor has ever mentioned to me, I think that is an oversight.Still looking a little inflamed but you can already tell it'll be a very modest-looking scar.
Be happy you're 70 rather than 85: in elderly patients it can be much more severe and take up to a year. During which time they generally go to a nursing home and their old place gets sold off because everyone assumes it's plain old dementia.
Might be fun once in a while, LOL, but not when you are in pain.anything in the NSAID family( hallucinated after taking them for only one day once).
Thanks Cate, and I will try to tune out for as long as necessary, but as I feel better its getting harder.Keep tuning out, Rob![]()
What do you take or do? Or do you just bear the pain?When my back pain gets bad, if I don't take OTC pain killers, the pain makes me clench up, thus leading to more pain, more clenching, etc. I agree about the opioids. When my mom took them, they didn't seem to do that much and it was worrisome that they are addictive.
Thanks, but it is getting pretty boring, the peach brandy is calling my name but I'll wait till I feel better for that.I'm happy you are watching tv and taking it easy and letting everything heal!![]()
I agree. I don't think anyone should be having unnecessary surgeries, even though of course they should remain legal (like breast implants, or even worse: leg lengthening for cosmetic reasons). And patients should be informed about the risks. Although I think there's a pretty large group of people who'd refuse even low-risk/high-reward surgery because most of us are terrible at understanding likelihoods and equally bad at doing things that are a little risky in other to avoid a much greater passive risk (like vaccination). And I can understand that consent forms would focus on the surgery-specific risks and only mention the relevant form of anesthesia in a byline. But... yes, I do wish people would be more aware.The post operative brain fog tends to get worse as we get older. Maybe a good reason to get any of these elective surgeries done as soon as we can... This is not something any doctor has ever mentioned to me, I think that is an oversight.
You are right of course, we need to know as much as we can about the risks. And without some kind of statistics those risks don't mean much. And you are right many, probably most people have a hard time understanding relative risk and risk probability, that is hard to fix but if we are given the statistics we at least have a chance of knowing.I agree. I don't think anyone should be having unnecessary surgeries, even though of course they should remain legal (like breast implants, or even worse: leg lengthening for cosmetic reasons). And patients should be informed about the risks. Although I think there's a pretty large group of people who'd refuse even low-risk/high-reward surgery because most of us are terrible at understanding likelihoods and equally bad at doing things that are a little risky in other to avoid a much greater passive risk (like vaccination). And I can understand that consent forms would focus on the surgery-specific risks and only mention the relevant form of anesthesia in a byline. But... yes, I do wish people would be more aware.
That would make sense, I would appreciate the longer version.Also: a lot of patients don't want to know or understand, which I find frustrating at times. But for relatively frequent surgeries like yours maybe they could have two standard information packs: one with the legally (or insurance) -mandated minimum and an additional one for those who want to dig into it. Or even just a link to a website with further info. Search engines are extremely convenient but legit sites aren't always the first to pop up and most people don't look past the first three results.
Thanks, and they are, just not so fast as I would like.Anyway: I'm glad to hear both pain and brainfog are going down. Maybe a bit of fogginess while the pain lasts will help you endure the inactivity better.
Thanks Liza, I hope so.Nice to hear your recovery is going well Rob and that you are going easy on yourself. You'll be back to the gym before you know it!
I know it varies from person to person, but also from surgery to surgery. My knee surgery had me out for almost 7 hours, this one was only a bit under 3. Little or no brain fog with the knees... no idea why more this time.It does sound like you are well on the way to recovery, Rob. The brain fog that lasted 6 weeks was back when I was in my early 40s so I would hate to think what it would be like now. Mind you I don't think I will be having general anaesthetic again unless it's an emergency.
I was released from the hospital just a few hours after surgery, did not spend a night there. Home since.Are you back home yet?
Thanks Emily, and yeah, day by day it is slowly getting better, too slowly for me but headed the right way.Sorry to hear you're not enjoying the rest period Rob. I know it is frustrating when you're used to being busy and active. BUT - you probably need this little time out. Glad to see you are feeling a little bit better each day.
Did they use the same anesthetic? If yes it could just be that your previous surgery was only a year ago. The second one in s relatively short amount of time generally hits harder.Little or no brain fog with the knees... no idea why more this time.