First trip traveling by air

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tsoebbin
tsoebbin Member Posts: 474
edited October 2016 in Lymphedema

I'm in research mode, trying to figure out what I need to know to travel by air for the first time with my lymphedema. Mike compression sleeves arrive tomorrow and our trip isn't for 3 weeks so I hope I'll be used to them by then.

Any tips or tricks that I should know of before I go?

I have a bit of Lymphedema in my trunk, and I'll wear my breast compression on the flight also.

Any help will be greatly appreciated

Comments

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

    I found it difficult to wear my sleeves/gauntlets for very long when they were new - try working your way up to wearing them by starting with a couple of hours a day and then increasing. I am sure to put my sleeves/gauntlets on at least an hour prior to the flight and keep them on at least an hour post flight - the earlier and longer the better for me. Also, avoid salty food, get up and move the length of the aisle if you can, hydrate, and fist pump periodically. Keep an eye on your swelling, if any, to monitor if there is an impact from flying. If so, get in a body of water like a pool, if you can - it usually helps. For truncal LE with sleeves some people wear a compression tank top so all is covered. Good luck!

  • Binney4
    Binney4 Member Posts: 8,609
    edited September 2016

    tsobbein, you don't mention hand protection (gloves or gauntlets), but they're important to use with a sleeve. Here's an explanation of why:

    https://www.lymphedivas.com/en/hand-protection

    Happy travels!
    Binney

  • tsoebbin
    tsoebbin Member Posts: 474
    edited September 2016

    I have gauntlets ordered. They should arrive with the juzo sleeves. Hoping they fit correctly!

  • tsoebbin
    tsoebbin Member Posts: 474
    edited September 2016

    Special K... I have couple of weeks before our trip... Hoping they fit correctly and i can get used to them and I'm able to go!

    Binney... I've been reading some of your posts in this forum and appreciate your question about the hand garment.

    So.much to learn!

  • pennsygal
    pennsygal Member Posts: 346
    edited September 2016

    tsoebbin - I'm in the same boat! I have flown once before, but I'm getting ready for an international flight in two weeks. I have my sleeves, gauntlets (which I never use at home) as well as my flexi-touch pump. I have LE in my trunk and breast as well, so I'm planning to wear a light compression cami on the flight.

  • tsoebbin
    tsoebbin Member Posts: 474
    edited September 2016

    I'm at the airport ready to board. Thanks for all your help. I'm very hydrated I have my sleeves the gauntlets and compression Cami on. I'll get up and move as much as I can and put my arms over my head and put my arms every half hour or so.

    First flights is one hour, an hour layover at the airport, and then a two and a half hour flight to our destination. Fingers crossed!

    Thank you!

  • ksusan
    ksusan Member Posts: 4,505
    edited September 2016

    Good luck! Don't strain to pull your stuff out of the overhead compartment. Just ask someone to help you. With the gauntlets and sleeves, they're going to just see you as somebody with a medical issue who could use some assistance. I was told that that's a good way to make sure you're not putting the lymphatic passages under stress.

    If you're not sure what to say to people, I usually just say, if I'm asked, that I had the surgery and I need to wear something for compression. I haven't had anybody ask me what I had surgery for. Most people don't get into it, though sometimes somebody will tell me, oh, yeah, my brother got lymphedema from his knee surgery, or whatever.

  • tsoebbin
    tsoebbin Member Posts: 474
    edited September 2016

    survive the first leg of the trip. I'm getting ready to board for the two and a half hour flight. Feeling good so far. Took a good walk around the airport in Seattle.

    After I land I have to wait 1 to 3 hours to take the sleeves off, right? Is anybody know why?

  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited September 2016

    You need to wait 1 hr to give your tissues time to normalize. Wearing compression may prevent swelling, but that doesn’t mean that your lymph fluid is draining correctly while at altitude. It takes about an hour after landing for the fluid to move back into the channels and the nodes. I was told that compression was necessarily only for flights>4 hr. (and my LE doc told me he never prescribes compression to someone who’s “had only 4 nodes out”) but on a 2.5 hr. flight from London-Geneva I noticed some finger swelling when not wearing compression. (Maybe it was all the sodium-laden cheese & charcuterie and the free champagne—first class was relatively cheap w/in Europe). I sweated out the TGV ride from Lausanne-Paris, because I knew we’d be crossing the Alps at very high speed, but I got no swelling despite not wearing compression. But because of that London-Geneva experience, I now don compression for any flight >1 hr. in length. (Didn’t wear it for the 45-min. flights between Rome & Pisa, and got no swelling).

  • ksusan
    ksusan Member Posts: 4,505
    edited October 2016

    You might like to know an interesting characteristic of the Australian study that showed no significant problems on flights under 4.5 hours. 4.5 is not a statistically-derived finding, but a functional limitation of the study--it used non-stop flights across Australia, the longest of which was 4.5 hours.

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