How was your pain after a lobectomy?
I'll be having a lobectomy (lower left) in early May and am very anxious about the post-surgery pain. Many years ago (about 35) I had a hysterectomy and remember being in tremendous pain when I woke up -- like nothing I had experienced before. That eased up while I was in the hospital but at home I had a lot of pain again. I think things have changed, the surgery itself as well as the approach to pain, but I am scared. How has it been for others?
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Thanks for checking in @maryckolben! My surgery is Friday.
Do let us know how you fare with your surgery. I too have been thinking of you and wish you all the very best. You are probably getting quite anxious but as I said previously you'll be OK and by this time next week it'll be all over. Pain is managed and don't forget your cushion to hug, helps a lot when coughing etc. Wish you a speedy recovery
Admire you, such a good planer!
I had upper right and middle right lobes removed in 2000 at age 46. I have a problem with oxy type drugs as they make me throw up. I had an epidural but after a few days it was making me hallucinate so they removed it too. So my pain was very bad. I was in hospital for about 11 days. I'd grown up on a farm and been hurt countless ways working around big animals but never ever had I experienced such pain as my bilobectomy.
Two years later I had my hysterectomy C section which was a walk through the park. Easy and the pain was 1/1000 of the bilobectomy. I was out running about campus in a few days.
Now I am 71 and there is just about no way on earth anyone could ever convince me to have another lobectomy.
Honestly, I planned so much that I probably didn’t need half of what I got but better to have and not need than to need and not have. I learned a lot from this site ahead of time. I was more worried about taking care of my family’s stress because it eased mine that way. I felt I was in Great hands at Mayo, so I was more worried about my husband stressing over taking care of me when I got home, so I tried to make it easier on him which made it easier on me. 🤗
Hi @yts5361, Ouch! It sounds like you've had a terrible time. Hopefully those ribs heal soon, and you get some relief. Working in law enforcement, I'm sure you are used to being active, and are a tough person. Being sidelined has to be frustrating.
What did the pathology report indicate? Are you headed for any additional treatments after some healing time?
Hi @maryckolben, thanks for sharing your story. Wow, walking is good for us in so many ways, isn't it? Your experience with the nerve block is interesting too. I had breast surgery late last year and had a nerve block (lasted about 3 days). I think it was very helpful. I wonder if the nerve blocks may be something that we see more of as some patients try to avoid the immediate post-surgical need for opiods.
Are you still feeling well, a little better each day? Starting to heal?
I also had an upper left lobe Segmentectomy in March of this year. They gave me Tramadol and 600 mg ibuprofen. I also had a nerve block. The only thing that was painful was where they had the drainage tube. I was expecting the surgery to be a lot more painful but it wasn’t. I stopped taking the Tramadol when I got home, just took the ibuprofen. I no longer need any type of pain pill.
I’m sorry you had a bad time and I will pray for you.
Hi Elsyer,
Good luck on Friday.
I had a robot assisted lower left lobe segmentectomy last Friday. Today is Tuesday and I'm doing pretty well. My family says I look better every day. This morning, I walked to the end of the street and back and up the stairs into my house. This afternoon, I overdid a little carrying something and had to lie on the couch and watch tv for an hour or so. My cough is getting productive and clutching a pillow to my side does the trick. I'm trying to stay on my feet as much as I can, do the breathing exercises, avoid pneumonia, and get my lungs back.
I was in the hospital for two nights. As everyone here says, the chest tube is the worst. As soon as that was out, pain went from 8 to 4. No, wait, the nausea was the worst! I had nausea, constantly. The took me off dilaudid but kept me on tramadol. As soon as they d/c ed the tramadol, the nausea subsided and I became cheerful again. It's amazing how you forgot the yucky stuff.
The pain in my side ( I have 5 small incisions and a larger wound from the tube) got a little worse today. I took off the big dressing yesterday and took a shower, but also my pulmonogogist had told me that the pain would be worst on day 3 because of the narcotics being thoroughly gone. It's well controlled with ibuprofen, acetominophen and methocarbamol, a muscle relaxor.
Sleeping hasn't been a problem, I have a wedge under the head of my mattress to control reflux. I have two pillows around my head and shoulders. This has me in a good enough position to not feel the incisions.
I'll be thinking of you on Friday. You started quite a nice, very informative thread of comments here. Good luck to you!
Muffy
Hi,
Yes, it’s been nonstop pain. I’m writing this in the ER. I woke up with a huge hump of air all down my left back.
I’m going to be admitted so that a radiologist can insert a small chest tube in the hopes of releasing the air.
My doctor came by and said the CT showed some fluid.
So…
If the small chest tube can’t drain everything, then he will have to put a regular chest tube in and see where there could have been a “dislodgment” that caused this sudden change.
I am so done.