On the early morning of 4th September 2013, I arrived on schedule to the
Sacred Heart Outpatient Surgical Unit. I was immediately taken to a
small room with a bed, asked to gown up (I could leave my underwear on),
and then settle into the bed. Once settled, I underwent an EKG and had
blood drawn for labs. Both were done quickly and without incident by
very efficient medical staff. Shortly after, an IV was put in place on
my hand, and a nurse began to monitor my vitals, including blood
pressure, temperature and oxygen levels. The nursing staff were all
cheery folks with great personalities, which helped to keep me relaxed
and entertained. Before long, my anesthesiologist came in and asked me a
series of questions. He advised that he would be inserting a tube into
my throat just before surgery so that they could manage my breathing
and he said that I might come out of anesthesia with a sore throat, but
that he didn't anticipate any problems. While he was talking to me, my
surgeon came in to check with me and also wanted to to see if I had any
questions. I totally appreciated the personal visits by both and I knew
I was in good hands. As soon as they left the room, the
anesthesiologist's surgical assistant came and advised he was going to
do some final prep and then move me to the surgical unit. He let me
know he was going to give me something to relax me while he moved me,
and warned me that I should be feeling that soon. He and one of the
nurses started pushing the bed into the hall and that was the last I
remembered. Anesthesia is magical!
I woke up in recovery
about 4 hours later with a nurse by my side trying to get me to talk to
him, and advising mat everything went great. Every few minutes he would
speak to me again, and before long, I was able to focus and remember
where I was and what I'd just been through. After a short time, he and
another nurse moved me back to my initial room, where my daughter was
waiting for me. I was pretty sedated, but remember that there really
wasn't any pain. At one point, I said that I was surprised that my eyes
weren't covered and the nurse said that they weren't going to cover
them...the doctor wanted the incisions exposed for better healing. Dr.
Michael came by and told me that everything went well, although he'd had
a tougher time with my left eye than my right, but it went good. I
asked what that meant, and he said that it wasn't anything bad, it just
took him longer to get through. He reminded me that I'd undergone "a
lot of surgery" and that I likely would be needing to stay with the pain
medications for a couple of days, but more importantly, he wanted me to
be sure to stay up on my antibiotics and steroid ointments. He said I
could go home as soon as I felt steady enough (which I already was
feeling), but he suggested I eat something light soon just to keep me
from experiencing nausea from the anesthesia. He had a nurse bring me a
juice and applesauce. He gave me his personal cell phone number and
said to call him immediately if I had questions, concerns, excessive
bleeding or pain. My instructions were to go home and sleep for the
rest of the day. Use ice packs for 10 minutes every hour to help reduce
swelling and bruising. Ointment in each eye and on the stitches
morning and night. Oral antibiotic morning and evening. Nasal spray (antibiotic) morning and evening, plus Afrin nasal spray for use only to control nose bleeds (addictive, I was warned). Pain meds
every 4 hours as needed. No blowing my nose; I could sniff, snort and
spit if I felt the need, but I was definitely not to blow my nose. I
could expect to see blood when I spit but I should not have significant
bleeding. I could expect small spots of blood from my nose, but I should report immediately if I saw significant bleeding. I should probably try to use two pillows or sit slightly up
in the bed while sleeping, or sit in a reclining chair. No bending or
lifting for 48 hours. No driving for 36 hours. I had no food restrictions. Showers okay after the first 24 hours, but take care that the water doesn't spray onto my face. I should resume my blood pressure med the next morning and any vitamin, low dose aspirin and other nutritional supplements after 24 hours.
My daughter said that I chatted with her during the 30 minute drive home, but I recall very little of it. I
do remember finally pulling the visor mirror down and looking at my
eyes and was totally startled by the bruising around my eyes. I looked
like I had been in a bar fight, plus my eyelids were pretty swollen and
red. But what was the biggest surprise to me was that I didn't see
stitches where I'd expected them to be. From all that I'd read online
about this external DCR, surgeons typically made incisions on the side
of the nose. My surgeon did his incisions along the "tear well" under
the eye, the natural line that follows the orbital bone. I was amazed
at the precision of his stitches...I could actually only see one or two
stitches with each incision; the others were simply done in a way that
they were not seen. As painful as everything looked, I wasn't in pain. I attributed that to the fact that I'd been medicated up during surgery and decided to follow the doctor's advice on being sure to "stay ahead of the pain", so took a pain pill at the time he advised me to, then went to bed and slept for about three hours. When awake, I began doing the ice applications he'd suggested. During recovery at the hospital, the nurse had brought me two tube-shaped disposable ice bags that I'd brought home with me which I continued to use. One of those with ice was perfect for laying across my eyes. The doctor had suggested using putting Karo syrup in a baggie and freezing it for a while to chill. I prepped such a bag, but while it was mold-able and really held the cold without solidifying, I preferred the ice bags. I followed the regiment of 10 minutes icing per hour for the first couple of hours, but found later that the ice applications helped me control the feeling of pressure and minor pain. By the second day, I was using mostly ice treatments and Tylenol during the day, preferring to endure the doped up feeling the pain meds gave me. I did take a pain pill at night. Again, I had discomfort, but very little pain, actually. While no external incision was visible on my nose, my nose was swollen and I experienced pain if I accidentally bumped it - obviously some surgery was done beneath the skin and I quickly learned to work around it as gently as the visible incisions. I also had an area above my right eyebrow that was quite tender to the touch; a small bruise was there too, but I figured it was from something done during the procedure and not a surgical area itself.
On close examination, I could see very small silicone stents looped into each tear duct.
Best of all...no tearing.
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