After being discharged from hospital in mid-December, I was now beginning the several month-long process of recovery from my skin flap surgery. The most important aspect of this was the strict avoidance of putting any pressure on the area from which the flap was taken and the area to which it was relocated. For me,Continue reading “SGAP Surgery: Recovery and Finally Sitting Again.”
Tag Archives: Recovery
Ileostomy Surgery, Part 6: The Disaster of Going Home and Needing MORE Surgery.
After everything that I’d endured throughout my time in hospital for my stoma surgery, I was thrilled to be finally going home. My last day was mainly tying a series of loose ends, doing all the before-you-leave checks and sorting out prescriptions. But I also had to have my stomach staples removed. I wasn’t exactlyContinue reading “Ileostomy Surgery, Part 6: The Disaster of Going Home and Needing MORE Surgery.”
What I Ate After Stoma Surgery.
Anyone with a stoma knows that diet is everything. Whether or not you have health issues like IBD which impacted the way you ate prior to surgery, what you eat does change once you have your stoma. In the early days after surgery, you’ll probably just be on water, which I found to be justContinue reading “What I Ate After Stoma Surgery.”
Ileostomy Surgery, Part 5: Ups and Downs.
After the previous day’s achievement of walking the 30m green route around the hospital, I was feeling up to taking the 80m red route today. After getting my rear dressing changed as it’d been leaking everywhere overnight (ew…), I took to the corridors. I felt far stronger and less light-headed having been eating and drinkingContinue reading “Ileostomy Surgery, Part 5: Ups and Downs.”
Ileostomy Surgery, Part 4: Getting Moving Again.
On the morning of the 31st of October, my urine catheter was finally removed in the hope that I could try and stand up for the first time later in the day. It definitely stung a little when the tube was removed, but I imagine it would feel much worse to get one put in!Continue reading “Ileostomy Surgery, Part 4: Getting Moving Again.”
