Archive for the 'recovery' Category

Oh, What a beautiful Morning (09/01/04 archive)

 

Oh, What a beautiful Morning

Date: 9/1/04 at 10:59AM

Sept. 1, 2004
Hollywood, FL
On post operation day 1 Carol has had the endotrachial tube removed, has sat in a chair for about 4 hours, recognized from the chest X-ray on the view box in her room that she did not have a valve replacement but a valve repair, has had breakfast, is talking with a sore throat, and seems to be returning to usual self. At the moment she is being moved out of the ICU to a regular room and has had the chest drainage tube removed.
Her sister, Marilyn Bean Oscar, is with her most of the time and reports a very good attitude, interest in her boys at home and fully aware of all around her. She does have some post op pain which is being medicated, and is dizzy-an expected symptom with this type of surgery.
The schedule indicates she will be walking today.
My what a beautiful morning.
Bill Bean

It is great to be alive! (09/11/04 archive)

It’s great to be alive!

Date: 9/11/04 at 6:26PM

I have actually been out of the hospital for a few days now, slowly getting back up to speed.

I finally began clearing out my e-mails last night, so it’s time to branch out, and continue the saga!

One of the first impressions I had on waking up from anesthesia was, “o.k., when are they going to take me in for the surgery?” But as I realized where I was (and there was suddenly a lot going on when I awoke), the persistent thought has been: Life is good.

Recovery has been proceeding pretty much as I was told it would, including the downs. So the calls, cards and messages have never failed to lift me just when I needed it. Thanks to every one of you!

Living with drugs (09/12/04 archive)

Living with drugs

Date: 9/12/04 at 10:19PM

Although the valve was repaired, I’m on an anticoagulant (warfarin) while the heart heals from the surgery. I’ve also been put on a beta blocker for the short term duration.I finally looked up the drugs and their side effects. It explains a lot about how I’ve been feeling! Common side-effects for the beta-blocker (from the USPDI):

(These side effects may go away during treatment as your body adjusts to the medicine)…dizziness or lightheadedness;� drowsiness (slight);� trouble in sleeping;� unusual tiredness or weakness

The anticoagulant side effects are scarier, but much more rare. Especially the part about temporary hair loss…I’m evidently still in the adjustment phase, so maybe some of these side-effects will diminish, or in the case of hair loss, never happen!

Progress in slow motion (09/19/04 archive)

Progress in slow motion

Date: 9/19/04 at 3:04PM

I am still recovering from the surgery. Ever so slowly. Nobody seems to be bothered by this except me, though.The cardiologist changed the beta-blocker to what I had been taking before the surgery. It’s a little better, but I still don’t seem to have much energy. Of course, I seem to be the only one surprised by this.

There was no significant damage from Frances (except it did take out my favorite grapefruit tree and some coconut palms — coconuts, anyone?). I have been watching everyone else working hard in the yard to clean up the mess, and feeling very guilty. The last of it is being finished up today (setting up the fences that were blown down).

It looks like another two weeks or so for me…

Smacked by the second shoe… (09/27/04 archive)

Smacked by the second shoe…

Date: 9/27/04 at 5:14PM

Hurricane Jeanne was really powerful. Fortunately the winds were from the west, then south, where we had the most protection. After Hurricane Frances, it didn’t seem like there could be any more to blow down, but Jeanne managed. We lost a couple more trees here, and one at my house, but both houses were unharmed.

I’ve got more energy (this is a relative assessment, since I still seem to need a lot of sleep), and am feeling much better. But my role in the post-hurricane cleanup is still “sit and watch.”

At least I can see some progress now, although I’m told my heart will be not just healing, but re-molding itself for quite a while back into an efficient model. Meanwhile, the doctors’ orders are to keep doing what I’m doing (nothing) and enjoy it.

Five months out… (02/09/05 archive)

Five months out…

Date: 2/9/05 at 2:23AM

And I am still here. I was hoping I’d be in better shape by now. But I am not complaining. It’s just that improvement has slowed to a crawl.

I am at work full time, doing everything I was before the surgery, but I don’t have much energy left over.

There is a changed perspective, however. Focus on what is really important tends to just stay center-stage now.

Looking back on August, and especially my plea to all my friends to pray a novena before the surgery that was scheduled for August 5, it looks like something amazing did happen after all. Thank you everyone who prayed that novena!

The surgery was canceled, so I ended up getting it robotically instead. Then there’s the timing of the surgery, which was delayed until just before Hurricane Frances. Of course, we didn’t realize that at the time of the delays, but that also turned out to be the best timing since I was in the hospital instead of trying to cope with the hurricane and the electricity outage.

And the clincher, of course, was the long time I was in surgery, and especially on the heart-lung pump, yet without any harmful effect. Thank you many times over to all who were praying for me. As I find things to complain about, as I encounter frustrations or annoyances, I remember how amazing it has all been, how people cared enough to stop and pray, and what a difference it made.

Looking for meat without cholesterol (02/12/04 archive)

Looking for meat without cholesterol

Date: 2/12/05 at 6:57PM

There is quite a lot of information out there about lowering cholesterol, and how to change one’s diet to reduce the “bad” cholesterol and increase the “good” cholesterol. There is especially a lot of effort put into educating heart patients about healthy eating habits. Most of those heart patients (85% of them?) had heart bypass surgery because of blocked arteries. Now, seriously, telling these patients to lower their cholesterol is a good thing.

However, after heart surgery, one of the first things you are told is to eat lots of protein. In cases like mine, of course, this is to give the body all the amino acids it needs to repair itself, and especially the heart as it reshapes itself. In fact, I am supposed to eat meat every day (every meal?).

So, on one hand I’m hearing:

Limit your sources of cholesterol (meats, fats, and hydrogenated oils)

On the other hand, I’m hearing:

Eat more meats

I’m O.K. with the ban on hydrogenated oils. I can live without margarine (mostly). I’m O.K. with eliminating the fat. But how do I eliminate the meat, and the fat that’s in the meat if I’m supposed to be increasing my meat consumption?

Perhaps I should note that before the surgery, I wasn’t much of a meat eater, and consequently had very good cholesterol levels and no clogged arteries. It has been quite an adjustment to make sure I have some kind of meat every day.

And so my dilemma: how to increase protein in my diet without sending cholesterol levels off the chart?

I hear fish is good for us (some fish, anyway), but there are those warnings to limit fish to a couple times a week. I suppose there’s chicken, but even “white meat” (including the “other white meat”) has fat in it.

I suppose this means another quest.