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What is a Prostatectomy Like?

Prostate Cancer | Last Active: 1 minute ago | Replies (59)

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@survivor5280

I believe I’m in a position to finally provide my own input into this. While I’ve not quite completed the entire process, I’ve experienced enough of it, and it’s fresh enough in my mind, that I can comment.

This is my second robot assisted surgery and, in fact, the exact same surgeon did my prostatectomy and he used almost all the same incision points and, in the end, the recovery from surgery itself is almost identical.

I keep relatively fit, with an emphasis on my core strength (think abs, etc), so having incisions to my abs became very painful to recuperate from both times.

So, what was it like? I just had it out a few days ago. No part of it is fun, but for me the worst part is the ab pain. I take the walking seriously and, like last time, I use a couple of canes to help stabilize me as I walk a bit more each day. Yesterday I pushed probably a bit hard and my abs were absolute murder for about an hour after, I mean more agony than I can remember in a long time. I had the option to take Oxy for this but skipped it because I only use that if the Tylenol doesn’t do the trick.

The second worse part, and it’s far worse this time, is dealing with the gas they pump into you for the surgery. It rises to the high points of your body, shoulders mostly, but if you favor one side while in bed then that entire side gets saturated and the pain is extremely intense. It dissipates over time but takes a few days, it’s already about 1/2 what it was before and that 1/2 is still pretty painful..

Getting used to a catheter for a week is an adjustment. While it generally doesn’t “hurt” (sometimes it does a little), it’s a constant annoyance that varies between you simply always being aware of it there or it actively reminding you that it’s there. I’m counting the days until it comes out - 4 days and change now.

Losing the ability to encourage the relief of your bowels is a huge adjustment. You just can’t do it. For one, you have a surgical zone to worry about breaking open and irritating, a urethra that is just barely stitched on and healing and your muscles are shot. For this reason they give you Gas X and a stool softener to help, but this entire process is pretty not fun. On top of all of this, Oxy constipates you so then you have to deal with that too. Once healed up you can operate in a similar fashion but have to remember that you no longer have independent control of bladder and bowel, so it’s a new “normal” to get used to.

Would I do it again? Probably. It sucks, but that little sucker is gone and so far the doctor is very optimistic that the cancer is taken care of for now. I could have opted for the other primary treatment, radiation, but since the side effects could be the same and then some, I opted out of that (plus every doctor said that at my age it wasn’t recommended, since I’m pretty young for this). There are also the outlier treatments that some have reported success with, maybe those would be better but they just weren’t for my case.

If you get RARP then just know you are NOT going to be back to normal in a few days. You could probably hobble around and try to get back to normal life but you are risking serious injury or even death if you tear something. Even sitting in my recliner doing very little, I thought I would be able to fire up my laptop and work more than I’ve actually been able to. Healing zaps your energy, your whole body is tired and it’s hard to keep up - add to that the bevy of pharmaceuticals and you have a recipe for resting rather than returning to normal.

That’s my $0.02 on my third day post-op.

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Replies to "I believe I’m in a position to finally provide my own input into this. While I’ve..."

is the pain constant or does tylenol help to reduce it. I was told by a doc that it would feel like doing 1000 crunches and I have never done more than 20. So not sure how to relate to that. Are you eating fiber rich food like oatmeal etc to help bowels?