ACDF Surgery, Rochester, long distance advice needed.

Posted by sandmason @sandmason, May 2, 2019

Neck disk surgery. We have an appointment but we can't get answers on a timetable. Would they have us make a return trip a few weeks later for surgery or schedule it within the week? Would we have to go back the next month for a follow up? Would it be safe to travel 1200 miles home in an RV? Frustrated at the lack of information on the internet and from their office.
Does anyone have experience getting long distance surgery on their spine?

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Visiting Mayo Clinic Support Group.

Hi @sandmason, welcome to Connect. You'll find some strategies to get answers to your questions in these related discussions on Connect.
- Tips for first dr visit and tests/appt schedules https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/tips-for-first-dr-visit-and-testsappt-schedules/
– How to get the most out of a visit? http://mayocl.in/2n5eXSH
– First visit to Mayo: Traveling alone http://mayocl.in/2hgasVG
– Getting your first appointment http://mayocl.in/2iNdgpc

@jenniferhunter may have some thoughts about the questions you ask.

While the surgical department may not be able to give a specific timetable, depending on the surgery outcome, they should be able to answer your questions regarding follow-up. Have you tried calling back to talk with someone else?

REPLY

@sandmason I had long distance ACDF surgery at Mayo in Rochester. It was a 5 hour drive for us. I chose to come back to see my surgeon for follow up, but he would have let me followup remotely from home. I came back for a 6 week followup and Xrays were taken by Mayo, but they could have mailed orders for them to be done near my home and I could have seen my primary care physician. At my 6 month followup, I did do X rays at home and mail them to my surgeon at Mayo. For scheduling, the surgeon's nurse does that, and does it all at once for a group of patients. I returned home after the first appointment, waited for a blood test result, then maybe a week after that, she was scheduling. I could have had surgery in 2 weeks at that point because an ACDF doesn't take as much time as a bigger spine surgery and can fit more easily into the doctor's schedule and be scheduled a little sooner. My surgeon would do 2 ACDF surgeries per day or one bigger spine surgery. They can have a cancellation for insurance issues or illness that might open up a surgery slot sooner, and surgeons travel to conferences too which delays their patient schedule. I stayed a few days in the hotel after surgery to make sure there were no complications, and returned home 3 days later by car. I was in a neck brace and you feel every bump in the road, and have to hold your head getting in and out of the car because any bending over will hurt, and you'll be very tired, but you have to get out and walk every few hours to avoid risk of blot clots after surgery. That risk is something they worry about for a month after surgery. A patient won't be able to drive or lift much weight. My restriction was 10 pounds max for the first 6 weeks. My surgery was about 6 weeks after my first appointment, but could have been done in 3 weeks, but I wasn't ready with my home organization that I knew I could not do after surgery. I think traveling 1200 miles driving would be OK if it's broken into easier chunks, maybe 3 days. After surgery, the patient just wants to sleep and would have to be supported well in the car for that (there is likely a hard neck brace, mine was a Miami J). You can contact your surgeon on the patient portal, and the nurse would respond. I'm presuming from your question that you are going for the evaluation first and need to get an offer for surgery first, and wondering how it proceeds from there? Mayo's evaluation is thorough, and they look at other issues you may have. You have to have a primary care physician clear you for surgery, but not older than a month to be valid, and the insurance companies have to review it to determine if they will cover surgery, and usually wait until the last days to accept it, so you're scheduled and wondering if it will get canceled by insurance. My insurance sent an approval about a week before my procedure. I wouldn't expect that you could do this all in one trip, and you might have options to think over. I could have had an ACDF or disc replacement (not the best choice in my case), but I had the choice. Let me know if this answers your questions. I think you have to get through that first appointment before your timetable comes into view. then at that point, the follow up are likely, 6 weeks, 6 months, and a year later. I had no hardware, just a neck brace that I wore for 4 months until fusion began per my agreement with my surgeon.

REPLY
@jenniferhunter

@sandmason I had long distance ACDF surgery at Mayo in Rochester. It was a 5 hour drive for us. I chose to come back to see my surgeon for follow up, but he would have let me followup remotely from home. I came back for a 6 week followup and Xrays were taken by Mayo, but they could have mailed orders for them to be done near my home and I could have seen my primary care physician. At my 6 month followup, I did do X rays at home and mail them to my surgeon at Mayo. For scheduling, the surgeon's nurse does that, and does it all at once for a group of patients. I returned home after the first appointment, waited for a blood test result, then maybe a week after that, she was scheduling. I could have had surgery in 2 weeks at that point because an ACDF doesn't take as much time as a bigger spine surgery and can fit more easily into the doctor's schedule and be scheduled a little sooner. My surgeon would do 2 ACDF surgeries per day or one bigger spine surgery. They can have a cancellation for insurance issues or illness that might open up a surgery slot sooner, and surgeons travel to conferences too which delays their patient schedule. I stayed a few days in the hotel after surgery to make sure there were no complications, and returned home 3 days later by car. I was in a neck brace and you feel every bump in the road, and have to hold your head getting in and out of the car because any bending over will hurt, and you'll be very tired, but you have to get out and walk every few hours to avoid risk of blot clots after surgery. That risk is something they worry about for a month after surgery. A patient won't be able to drive or lift much weight. My restriction was 10 pounds max for the first 6 weeks. My surgery was about 6 weeks after my first appointment, but could have been done in 3 weeks, but I wasn't ready with my home organization that I knew I could not do after surgery. I think traveling 1200 miles driving would be OK if it's broken into easier chunks, maybe 3 days. After surgery, the patient just wants to sleep and would have to be supported well in the car for that (there is likely a hard neck brace, mine was a Miami J). You can contact your surgeon on the patient portal, and the nurse would respond. I'm presuming from your question that you are going for the evaluation first and need to get an offer for surgery first, and wondering how it proceeds from there? Mayo's evaluation is thorough, and they look at other issues you may have. You have to have a primary care physician clear you for surgery, but not older than a month to be valid, and the insurance companies have to review it to determine if they will cover surgery, and usually wait until the last days to accept it, so you're scheduled and wondering if it will get canceled by insurance. My insurance sent an approval about a week before my procedure. I wouldn't expect that you could do this all in one trip, and you might have options to think over. I could have had an ACDF or disc replacement (not the best choice in my case), but I had the choice. Let me know if this answers your questions. I think you have to get through that first appointment before your timetable comes into view. then at that point, the follow up are likely, 6 weeks, 6 months, and a year later. I had no hardware, just a neck brace that I wore for 4 months until fusion began per my agreement with my surgeon.

Jump to this post

A great detailed post!

REPLY
Please sign in or register to post a reply.