DIEP 2013

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  • goldie4040
    goldie4040 Member Posts: 2,280
    edited May 2013

    Wow, Shechirple.  Not too much info at all.  You sound like me when I get mad.  They always have a hard time getting blood out of me, and when the blood person comes I give them one chance.  When they fail and I sent them away the mood around my room always changes, sorry, but I will only be stuck once!

    Why the hot rooms after surgery?  Is there a reason for that?  I was told they keep hospitals really cold to keep the possiblity of infections growing down. 

    Well except for lousy care in the hospital, you are doing okay.  Hang in there.  Keep us posted.

  • liefie
    liefie Member Posts: 2,440
    edited May 2013

    Oh my goodness, SheChirpie, what a bad experience! Wow - no wonder you feel like it's been five days in hell. I cannot believe those nurses. New hospital always sounds wonderful, but one forgets that it takes time, probably weeks, before it runs smoothly, and that some patients may fall by the wayside, as you experienced. One would expect however that the nurses will know how to use the equipment!? Well, you're home now, I hope you will be treated like a queen, and that things will hopefully only get better from here. Pubic hair on your boob - too funny! LOL!

  • wraithg
    wraithg Member Posts: 93
    edited May 2013

    nihahi I wore my compression for four weeks and then was told by doctor to take it off. I was going to taper off but just stopped wearing rather quickly. Its now 3 months post and I am getting back to work slowly. I get tired easily and feel very fat these days. None of my pants fit around the waist!! My tummy is not as flat as after surgery. The franken boobs are fine but left side where radiation was done is harder ,lumpy and gets sore at times. I see my PS mid June. I must say though, that I have been lucky with no complications, no infections, or blisters. 

  • kuka21174923
    kuka21174923 Member Posts: 427
    edited May 2013

    Shechirpie, I'm so sorry about your experience. Have you told your ps? He needs to know how the hospital is treating his patients.

    When I had my surgery I asked my ps if he had to keep my room warm, but he said that they don't really do that anymore. So I was able to keep my room as cold as I wanted to, and that I did! All the nurses would tell me how cold it was when they walked in my room, but I get hot flashes and like to keep the room cool.

    Why the pubic hair on your boob? Didn't your ps get the skin from your tummy with no hair on?

  • MartyJ
    MartyJ Member Posts: 1,859
    edited May 2013

    Shechirpie - you really, really need to give your doc the details. Nurses can cause flap failure by not knowing about the surgery, by moving you improperly, by not being familiar with the equipment. It has happened. Your PS can and should train hospital staff and have staff directly assigned to his/her case. Not only is this better for the patient it also protects the doctor. So sorry you have had a nightmare hospital experience!



    Re the pubic boob - after you have healed completely they can laser the hair off. The PS should do that for free, but . . .

  • deb1973
    deb1973 Member Posts: 96
    edited May 2013

    Long-time lurker here. I had my surgery (BMX) w/ bilateral DIEP on April 26 & just wanted to assure Shechirple that it does get better.

    Sorry that your hospital experience was so grueling. I too found that there was huge variability in nurses & they kept me almost a week so I had a lot of material to compare.(My PS team is very protective of the new boobs & tend to give their patients longer stays, esp. mothers of young children).

    Most of them were pretty good, thank goodness, but escaping the hospital & getting my drains out made me feel sooo much better.

    For others going into a hospital environment, my advice is to have your family close to you as much as possible esp. right after surgery so you have advocates. Also reward excellence (I gave small presents to the nurses who went above and beyond) & tell the supervising nurse when you like someone b/c then if you're lucky, they will be assigned to you again.

  • ssla01
    ssla01 Member Posts: 480
    edited May 2013

    SheChirpie - I'm sorry about your hospital experience, but I am so proud of you for standing up for yourself. I think it is often hard to stand up for yourself when you are in such a vulnerable situation. I love your wording "psychological torture." I feel like that is what is going on with the insurance game and the hospital I plan to use for surgery.

  • sbelizabeth
    sbelizabeth Member Posts: 2,889
    edited May 2013

    Goldie, a lot of us have had the "hot room" or other kind of warming experience directly after surgery.  The rationale is that by keeping the body nice and toasty, it encourages the blood supplies to the flap to stay relaxed and dilated, enhancing blood flow.  Blood flow is good.

    My room was normal temperature, but they had a warm-air blanket on me, which should have been called a hot flash machine.  At one point my temp went so high they gave me some tylenol to bring it down.  But it was do-able, and a day of discomfort is absolutely worth it.

    Today, my sisters, I'm wearing a slim-fitting, frothy-type dress to dress to work, which I NEVER would have worn pre-DIEP. I need to have a garage sale to get rid of all the ugly, matronly stuff I wore when I had to accomodate one boob and a saggy tummy. 

  • nihahi
    nihahi Member Posts: 3,841
    edited May 2013

    Shechirple...you are absolutely right, that on this place we should feel safe to post both the "good and the bad". It sounds like your challenges were with the staff, not the surgery/recovery?? I'm so sorry you had such a tough go of it "staff" wise. For sure, you need to let your PS know what you experienced. As Martyj wrote...flaps could be put in jeopardy by staff who are unaware of proper protocol or who are unskilled. Overall, I had great care, but one nurse and 1 aide were my nemesis. They were nice people, but unaware of proper protocol and the nurse was unskilled with some of the equipment. I totally get the "alarm torture"!!!! Unfortunately, I had them on the days when my tolerance was low, from constant nausea and tossing my cookies. You have to advocate for yourself....when it was shift change and one of my "angel" nurses informed me I would be having the "difficult" nurse again, I started to cry and told her my issues. Next thing I knew, I had a different team that shift, and never had her again. Pube hair on the flap? Gosh, he must have incised you reallly low...hope like marty said, it will be sorted out for you.

    Sounds like home is the best medicine for many of us, glad to hear you are at the point where you can look back and see your progress.

    Movie.....we are waiting anxiously for your stories!!!!!

    ssla....I feel for you ladies with the added stress of insurance issues. I hope you get word soon that things are sorted out the way you want.

    goldie....the "warm room" protocol is to keep the blood vessels dilated (open) to encourage good perfusion of the new flap. Sometimes, the room is kept normal temp, but warm blankets are used to keep you "glowing" with warmth.

    Geralyn....sheesh...sorry you are still having issues. Are you maybe anemic???? Can you get in to see your family doc to check some things??? If you feel so down about things, maybe some "well understood" depression has latched on to you??? We can get so ramped up pre-surgery, that I bet many ladies feel quite a letdown when all the "commotion" and concerns start to fade away. I hope the appt. in June answer/sorts out the tummy/size issues for you....keep us posted. 

  • nihahi
    nihahi Member Posts: 3,841
    edited May 2013

    sbelizabeth....messages crossed in cyber-space.  WOOHOO.....you are rocking it girl!!!!!! Shoe description please!!!!!

    OK....I am sooooo going clothes shopping....even if I don't need anything different sized!!!!!! Of course, my typical clothing stores are places like Camper's Village and Mountain Equipment Co-OP, but I'm going anyways!!!!!!

  • liefie
    liefie Member Posts: 2,440
    edited May 2013

    Sbelizabeth, you obviously have some new-found confidence, and are sooooo enjoying your femininity again - exactly the reasons why I had the surgery. Thanks for sharing - you go, girl!

    Nihahi, maybe add Winners to your list of stores - I've found some nice things there for very reasonable prices in the past. Once bought a 100% wool coat there for $80. Not bad.

    Wonder how long before all the swelling disappears? Seems to still be a little swollen around the tummy incision, and south of there too - lol. I can now see that I have a wedge-shaped flap neatly sutured into place on my breast, and I marvel again at what these docs can do. Breast feels a bit hard and tender closest to the breastbone area, but that should soften up with time. That's also the area where I felt the TE fills the most.

    Movie, come in! Or are you too tired from romping around that pool fighting off all the attention? LOL.



  • nihahi
    nihahi Member Posts: 3,841
    edited May 2013

    Liefie...I'm chuckling....I just don't have a lifestyle that warrants things other than "active lifestyle" clothes, and I'm way too "scottish" to buy something I won't get tons of use out of. When I shop at Winners, I'm looking for some new yoga tops Laughing!

    If they connected your flap vessels to the mammary artery/vein, that would be located where you say the hard, tenderness is. They may have snipped out some rib cartilege there to access, so totally understandable to have "something" going on there. 

    No swelling for me, once I got home and started wearing the compression garment. I'm thinking of starting to taper myself off it now, as truly, my waist is smaller than pre-surgery, and no "nether region" issues either. But I'm gonna be watching the scar itself, too, as I believe big time in the affects of compression on scar tissue. If the scar needs the compression, I'm keeping it on. 

    Anyway, like I posted on our other thread, I truly have to get busy with the rest of my day......(((((x)))) to all.

  • sbelizabeth
    sbelizabeth Member Posts: 2,889
    edited May 2013

    I bet Movie's in jail.  No internet there.

    Nihahi, the shoes this morning are basic flat leather flip-flops; I didn't want to fancy up this fancy dress too much.  But they're the wrong color--I need something in white!

    I don't know if our Canadian sisters have access, but I order a lot from Coldwater Creek.  Pretty stuff and pretty colors.  I don't spend much time shopping in real stores--just not enough time--but I love shopping on the internet, especially if I can get free shipping.  And the tax is always lower than shopping locally. 

  • kuka21174923
    kuka21174923 Member Posts: 427
    edited May 2013

    Katy, I do the samething. I can spend a lot if money without leaving the house. But if I have to pay for shipping, forget it!

    I tried the underwire bras that I bought right before my surgery and they don't fit:(. There's nothing in the middle to fill them up, so I guess I'll have to continue wearing my sports bra until ps cones my breasts.

    Movie, where are you? I can't wait to hear about your adventures!

  • 5andcounting
    5andcounting Member Posts: 232
    edited May 2013

    I thought I would add to the funny stories about being in the hospital. When I had to be rushed back to surgery for a complication, there was a grumpy anesthesiologist who yelled, as we rounded the corner to go into OR, "don't bring her in here. I just finished a c section. You'll have to wait!" I said "well we are trying to save my flap!" Had lots of pain meds on board.

    About that time Dr Kline saw him and "kindly" directed him to the other OR. Anesthesiologist was still bitching, "I've been here since 7 am, there's a law about how long we can work". To this I said (again lots of pain meds) " I need you to stop complaining and pay attention to what you're doing"

    He put me out with a mask so fast, I barely had time to blink:)

    I don't even wanna know what he did or said while I was out. Lol. Even good places have bad apples:)

  • sbelizabeth
    sbelizabeth Member Posts: 2,889
    edited May 2013

    CRS, when I had my mx, the anesthesiologist intubated me and dinged my lip in two places.  He was a nice guy, but I've spent my career intubating people and there's no excuse for an experienced physician, in a clean, dry, well-lit operating room, to ding a patient's lip.  When the surgi-center made their chirping "how are you doing, dear?" phone call the next day, I said, "fine, except the anesthesiologist dinged my lip, and it hurts." 

    A week later the anesthesiologist called to apologize.  I was astonished, but gratified.

    I tell this story to encourage you to WRITE A LETTER about the rude treatment you endured from your physician, quoting every word that was exchanged.  There is no excuse for his disregard to patient welfare and appalling lack of compassion for a patient in distress.  I don't care if he's tired.  If he can't do his job, he should find something else to do. 

    Can you tell I'm peeved?!

  • nihahi
    nihahi Member Posts: 3,841
    edited May 2013

    Excellent conversation today re: experiences and "actions". You are so right......even good places have bad apples, and I'd like to add....even good apples can have bad days. The people caring for us....are people too. That being said, there is ABSOLUTELY NO EXCUSE for sloppy technique or "attitude" when we are "vulnerable" patients! One of the reasons this thread is so important to me, is to help not just us, but those who follow us.

    Sooooo.......Defo, like sbelizabeth says: write the letters, inform the surgeons, talk to the nurses. TOWANDA!!!!!!!!

    Sheesh, I hate spell check on my phone!
  • Morningsun1
    Morningsun1 Member Posts: 649
    edited May 2013

    I am with  sbelizabeth, Movie must be in jail.  No internet there...

  • goldie4040
    goldie4040 Member Posts: 2,280
    edited May 2013

    Okay, here is a weird question.  As some of you know I supposedly had a skin sparing mastectomy, with expander's put in, but the incision keeps failing on the left, etc.  So, now I am scheduling either for a diep, or lat.  But, that is not the point of my post.  I was told before my mastectomy that breast tissue is not just in your "breast", but under your arms, and all the way up to your clavacle bone.  So, they don't just take your breast, but pretty well scoop out all breast tissue to make sure there is no where for breast cancer to grow again. 

    Okay, now that I have explained that part, here is what is happening to me a lot.  On the scale I weight about 2 pounds less than before surgery.  I have been wearing a fairly good fake set of foobies.  I don't wear anything low cut, so there needs to be no illusion of cleavage.  I went out to lunch today with a couple of friends, and then we went shopping.  When they dropped me off they said, "you look really good, but you need to put some weight back on." I have had this comment often, from my son, my daughter in law, my husband.  All clothes are fitting the same, when I have fake boobs in, and pants, and skirts are not big.  I think that the tissue they took from my chest during the mastectomy makes me look thinner on top.  The bones in my chest show very slightly, not enough to look gross.  But, I think that is what people are perceiving as thinner, but they think it is all of me. 

  • liefie
    liefie Member Posts: 2,440
    edited May 2013

    Nihahi - LOL re clothes shopping, we're pretty much on the same page. My wardrobe consists mostly of workout clothes, at least that's what I'm wearing 90% of the time. I'm way more about comfort than anything else. When we go out somewhere, the moment we get home I change into my soft, comfy pants and loose tops. My last purchase at Winners was a yoga mat - LOL. I have some compression garments in my closet - will try them for the swelling.

    sbelizabeth, you are just too hilarious. Movie in jail with no internet, arrested for the riot and upset she caused - LOLOLOLOLOL!

    Re treatment of patients, it comes down to plain, good old respect for other people, and that wise old saying, do unto others . . . Patients in a hospital/OR are way out of their comfort zone, and they are there for a good reason, not for a picnic! Exhaustion is certainly no excuse for anybody to be rude, not even a 'hotshot' anaesthetist. Everybody gets tired. CRS319, I so enjoyed the way you set him straight - I bet he does not hear that too often! You can just be glad he did not overdose you - LOL!

    Just to be fair though, there is also another side of the coin. There is a small percentage of patients who are impossible to please. I've experienced it firsthand working in a medical environment from time to time. No matter what you do for them, they are rude, entitled and demanding, and never satisfied. It takes all kinds to make the world, eh?

  • MartyJ
    MartyJ Member Posts: 1,859
    edited May 2013

    Kuka, my PS doesn't allow underwire bras during treatment. There are a bunch of theories around about the wires pressing and shifting things. Just something to consider. I found a wacoal bra without wires that is pretty comfy.

  • Catie2013
    Catie2013 Member Posts: 1,023
    edited May 2013

    I think I might have been one of those patients, Liefie - I had to go into surgery 3 weeks after my bmx and SGAP for dehiscing and it was rather quickly. Usually I'm an early OR patient, this time I had to wait for them to squeeze me in late in the day (probably last case). My veins are horrible since chemo and blood not easy to get from me. AND can't use one of my arms (shouldn't use either but 3 nodes vs 17 - we use the 3) anyway:



    Nurse comes in to get IV started, doesn't find a vein. Tries again, no vein. Tries the 3rd time decides the best place is on the front of my hand at the wrist in the middle. IT hurts like heck unless I don't move it at all. I complain, she goes back and the Anesthesiologist comes back and says: "Well, now YOU tell ME where you want it!" -



    I was ticked at the Dr, told my Dr. so the next surgery 2 weeks later (same problem other side) my Dr made sure I didn't have the same Anesthesiologist working on me!



    He was the type you could put on People's most handsome man of the century, but his attitude was horrible...............however, reading your email, maybe it was me?! :(

  • sbelizabeth
    sbelizabeth Member Posts: 2,889
    edited May 2013

    Liefie, I agree 100% with you about some patients being impossible to please.  I once needed to fly a man having a heart attack to the hospital and there wasn't room in the aircraft for his wife.  His wife, who impressed me as being controlling and narcissistic, said, "well, if I'm not going, HE'S not going."  !!!  We finally convinced her to allow her husband to receive the care he needed.  But even in this tangle of self-centered weirdness, I would not have felt justified in being rude or mean to her. 

    As a flight nurse, I stopped flying 24-hour shifts when I realized I didn't mind flying all day but I really hoped they'd let me sleep at night.  I'd look at my paramedic partner, who could have been my son, flapping around with his radio and trauma bags, IVs loaded up in his pockets and a roll of tape swinging from his belt, and just think, "maybe he wouldn't mind carrying me to the helicopter and waking me up when we get there."  It was time to move on

    Maybe CRS's anesthesiologist was a good apple having a bad day, but in my humble opinion, someone who provides direct patient care in such an environment doesn't have the right to inflict their bad days on their patients.  People who are having babies--are worried patients in the emergency department--about to be put on a helicopter because they're critically injured--or being wheeled into an operating room for MORE surgery in an attempt to salvage their brand-new breast--will remember those moments forever.  As a caregiver, do I want to be an unnecessary thorn in that experience, or a blessing?

    Climbing down now from this soapbox. 

  • liefie
    liefie Member Posts: 2,440
    edited May 2013

    Catie, noooooo way! You just stood up for yourself in that situation, as you should. There was nobody else there to do it for you! It's not your fault that you have difficult veins, and as professionals, they should handle it better. What's with these anasthesiologists and their bad attitudes? Seems they're a breed of their own - LOL.

    sbelizabeth, right on! If you have a bad atttitude about your job, maybe it's time to move on. So true for medical staff who work with patients. Patients need professional care; they don't deserve a bad attitude. In all fairness, most nurses and docs are caring and professional, and we tend to take it for granted until a bad apple comes along. I once had a huge fight with a nurse because of the way she verbally abused the young woman in the bed next to mine who had to get an unexpected C-section. This patient was crying and so upset that I decided to take this nurse on about her stinking attitude. Enough was enough. End of the story was that that nurse was taken off the maternity ward after I had been interviewed by her superiors. Such unfairness should never be tolerated. Now I'm off my soapbox - lol.

  • Catie2013
    Catie2013 Member Posts: 1,023
    edited May 2013

    I think sometimes the medical profession (not PS' so much) has been hammered too by what insurance will allow them to cover. My internist has been saying to me (especially when she saw my flap) that my situation is 'above her pay grade'. Now, I've been going to Drs for a long time and never heard that from a Dr.!!! I've gotten referrals to other Drs. But not that phrase! (She used it when she dx me with Hypothyroid - then I researched and had a bunch of ??? s for her and when I started, she didn't let me get to question #2 before she said, "Oh, that is above my pay grade - you should see an Endo!" GOOD Grief- if I can be dx by you and you want me to take meds the rest of my life because of it, you should be able to tell me what T3 is! So, I see an Endo - and glad for it because it appears that it truly was above her pay grade! But I think they are getting zonked by insurance.

  • LSMB4
    LSMB4 Member Posts: 14
    edited May 2013

    Cherrie, Bravo!!!  You are almost there!  The drains are not easy to carry around and if you just got them out, then you are blessed.  I pray for a successful recovery and I will be in touch with you.

    Liefie,  Thank you so much for the information.  I am not as thin as I used to be.  That is why I seem to be a good candidate for DIEP now.  Of course, I will know more once I see my surgeon.  I live around Boston and we have some very good PS here.  It is so good to hear from you ladies.  It helps me a lot.  My appointment is on June 19 and I will know more then.  I will get back in touch with you once I know more.  I just want to be able to get this done and go back to a normal life (whatever that might be).

    God bless you all!!!

  • Dyvgrl
    Dyvgrl Member Posts: 471
    edited May 2013

    Sbelizabeth,

    I truly had to bust out the dynamite. Never have I been in so much pain. When docs say take your colace ladies, double it!! On a different note, got my pathology back and turns out I have IDC, DCIS, and LCIS all with different features. Thank God I decided against a lumpectomy!! None of this was confirmed with imaging! One lymph node was involved, but she took 9. Not sure why so many but really not complaining at this point. I have great margins except for the elusive tumor 2 which is only 1cm so have to meet with rad onc to see if I can avoid it either with more surgery or if its good now or if he's just going to do it regardless. We should know tomorrow. So as far as I can tell I ended up a Stage 3a? Instead of Stage 2 like we thought. Been a tough day for me. Thank God the sun is shining!!

  • Lmo45
    Lmo45 Member Posts: 39
    edited May 2013

    Crs319,



    I think we had surgery at the same time (5/1) and I'm still having breast pain too, so it must be normal. I'm also in a compression bra (not sure if you are?) but that might explain the pain, if so?



    I also start chemo next Thursday. I am physically fit and about 10-15 pounds overweight, so I hope to respond ok to chemo and hope to exercise. Of course right now I'm only allowed to walk, but have a PS appt Tuesday, so hope to get go ahead for more exercise(within my pain threshold).



    Today is actually the first day I woke up with the least amount of pain in my breasts, so I'm hoping I've crossed a hurdle.



    Hope all are doing well. Interesting about the blisters, good to know if I develop any.



    Katy-thank you for your advice about getting in front of the whole constipation thing. Definitely heeding your warning and took good notes. You write so beautifully and I'm completely entertained while at the same time getting educated. You have a great spirit too! Everyone does on this thread, it's given me the confidence that I can get thru chemo as it did to get thru DIEP surgery!

  • ssla01
    ssla01 Member Posts: 480
    edited May 2013

    Dyvgirl. Wow, what a day! You'll be in my prayers.



    Sharon

  • SheChirple
    SheChirple Member Posts: 954
    edited May 2013

    Today I wrote thank you notes for ALL of the staff who took care of me in ICU and the Ward. It was cathartic.

    I feel much better today after being home 24 hrs, getting my environment mostely set up, and taking a few phone calls from well wishers.  My typing fingers are now working and I'm not dozing off to sleep everytime I sit still for 10 minutes. Hubby gave me a nice sponge bath, washed my hair and all possible skin.  AAAhhhhh. 

    I saw my PS on discharge day, Wednesday, and he said I would receive a call for follow up one week exactly from surgery, that if I didn't hear by Friday to call his office. I'm looking forward to seeing him.

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