What happens after the drains are removed?

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Luna52
Luna52 Member Posts: 147

My surgeon removes the drains after 1 week, so that will be Monday for me. The fluids are lessening and starting to look a bit lighter so all good so far.

I know I will find out from her on Monday but I'd like to know others' experience. Once the drains are out, does the fluid continue to seep out of the incision site (ugh)? She mentioned in my pre-surgery appointment that I may need to come back for her to aspirate the site, possibly more than once. How will I know when that is necessary? I assume by swelling but right now I am taped up like a mummy with a compression bra over the bandages.

How often did you need your surgeon's help draining after your mastectomy?

Mine was a simple BMX with no node removal and no reconstruction.

Thanks!



Comments

  • KathyL624
    KathyL624 Member Posts: 217
    edited September 2016

    Once I had mine out, I did not have to go back to aspirate. There was a tiny amount of fluid on the gauze for maybe two days and that was it.

  • PoppyJQ
    PoppyJQ Member Posts: 109
    edited September 2016

    My first thought when I read your question "what happens after..." was do the happy dance! I felt so free when mine was gone! But really just wanted to say hello and glad youre doing so well already. I have BMX coming up in a few weeks so its good to see drains may come out after a week. I've only had a drain after lumpectomy/node surgery years ago and didnt have to go back for further drainage.

  • Denise-G
    Denise-G Member Posts: 1,777
    edited September 2016

    Happy dance is right!! For most of us, we felt immediately better! Mine were removed in 3 weeks as I had so much fluid. That was the worst part!


  • ravzari
    ravzari Member Posts: 277
    edited September 2016

    Fluid does seep out for a little bit (usually just a couple hours or a few minutes), so they put a thick bandaid, more or less, over my two drain sites and told me to just leave that there until the next day.

    I was told they might 'leak' a little on and off for a couple of days and if they did to just put some gauze and tape over it. Mine weren't removed until they were producing under 25ml of fluid within a 24 hour period for two solid days; I didn't produce much fluid and, by day 3 of drains, was only producing about 8ml on each side every 24 hours. They still had me keep them in for the full week though 'just to be safe' (booo! :) ).

    My PS also told me that, if I wanted to lower the risk of seromas/fluid build up that might require aspiration, to make sure I continued to wear the compression garment for the full 4 weeks recommended, which I did, and had no issues with seromas or fluid build up.

  • msphil
    msphil Member Posts: 1,536
    edited September 2016

    hello all i didnt have to go back either once i was discharged nurse came out once my husband wanted to help so she showed him n she didnt have to come out again. God Bless Us All.msphil idc stage 2 0\3nodes Lmast chemo and rads n 5 yrs on tamoxifen.

  • leftduetostupidmods
    leftduetostupidmods Member Posts: 620
    edited September 2016

    Worrisome that she has a timeline instead of output amount. Someone can have under 20 cc per day after three days, while someone else can still have 50 cc per day after two weeks. That. and the fact that she says she might have to "aspirate" is really worrying. Because that means she's milking for money without worrying about your well being. She gets paid to do the "aspiration" while if she leaves the drain in place to do the job she doesn't get extra money.

    Because what happens if the drains are removed before the 20-25 cc per day, you will most likely get seromas. The area will keep seeping. Seromas need drainage (aspiration) and not only that but they can cause quite severe scarring (I had to deal with that for almost 3 years after surgery)

    If the drains are taken out after the 20-25 cc per day max, you will just get a bandaid and told not to shower for 24 hours, after which you take the band aid off and see a few drops of yellowish-beige dry liquid. That's about it.

  • tangandchris
    tangandchris Member Posts: 1,855
    edited September 2016

    I agree with Seachain on this one.....

    I had drains in forever it seemed because my docs would not remove until they were under 20 cc's I think it was....and I still developed a seroma. To be honest, you are the first person I've seen post that their doctor said this. The more aspiration that has to be done the more of a chance for infection as well. I'm not trying to scare you or even question you...but are you sure this is what they said?

  • SpecialK
    SpecialK Member Posts: 16,486
    edited September 2016

    I also concur with seachain and tangandchris - using an arbitrary time period rather than drain output can lead to serious issues - seroma, and seroma aspiration, are both infection risks. I have seen some patients from Europe whose surgeons have removed drains prior to hospital discharge (in Europe they seem to stay in the hospital longer for surgery), which would be similar to this timing concept. The logic is that drains are an infection risk, but I have seen a lot of folks on BCO who have needed drains for a lengthy time period to prevent seromas. I have had drains half a dozen times and always have them removed in about a week, but three different docs have all used the under 30mls in a 24 hour period as the benchmark.

  • Luna52
    Luna52 Member Posts: 147
    edited September 2016

    Seachain and TangandChris,

    Thanks for your insights.

    I asked her when the drains would come out when she examined me in the hospital the day after surgery. I believe what she said was that in my type of procedure, she usually finds that there is not a reason to leave them in longer than a week. She has been excellent throughout this so I am confident she would not remove the drains if there was still a level of output. She told me to make sure I tracked all my output, which I am doing. She also told me everyone's rate of drainage is different. I think I jumped on the "one week" because it sounded good to me!

    The discussion of aspirating came up in my last pre-surgery visit where we talked about possible complications from the surgery. She definitely didn't mean that was part of the normal protocol.

    I'll keep all your good information in mind on Monday and won't hesitate to speak up.




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