Grandesa wrote:
Thanks Dave. You definitely have the clarity that I won't have until after the procedure. I am going to leave it to the surgeon as well. He says he can do either implant and stocks them both.
I am first on the table so I have to be there at 6 AM. I hope I don't have to wait long. Did you leave the same day or spend a night in the hospital?
Can I ask where and when you had the procedure?
I had the surgery Oct. 31, 2012 at Encinitas, Ca. ( as suburb on the north side of San Diego).
I was in the hospital for "23 hours" and left about 9:30AM the morning following the surgery. I have mixed ideas about whether it is best to stay overnight or not. My doc did not give me the choice and I did not ask him if there was a possibility I could leave the same day. On the side of staying overnight:
1. I had a catheter which the doc removed just before I left the hospital. They are a nuisance to travel with so being in the hospital makes that easier. I had a partial prostectomy for BPH 9 years ago and had to have a catheter for 10 days after that. It did not fit my bladder well so leaked a little urine every once in awhile, especially when I stood up, which burned in my uretheria for about 45 seconds. I did not have this problem after the implant surgery though as the catheter seemed to fit right this time.
2. Having professional nurses to look after me was an advantage. They did not actually have to do much except give me my medications and food on the right schedule, but knowing I had pros was good. How much this means depends on what home care you would have. If you live by yourself, this would bias towards the overnight stay.
On the other side of the coin:
1. The major concern with this surgery, or any stay in the hospital, is the chance of picking up an infection in the hospital. A nurse friend of mine who has worked temp in many local hospitals says that even the best have problems with MRSA infections. When I had my prostectomy surgery they put me in a double room and the guy in the other bed had been there two weeks with an infection they could not cure. So I spent 3 days separated from him only by a curtain and a few feet of air. Plus my room mate kept rolling over every 20 minutes and cutting off his IV, which caused it to sound an alarm. This was a nuisance in the day time and disturbed my sleep in the night. I finally got him to have the nurse show him how to stop the alarm, so when he did it I would yell at him and he would wake up and shut it off. Before that the alarm sounded until a nurse got around to showing up which they did not do very fast as they knew he had just done it for the 1000th time. For my implant surgery I requested a private room which would have cost me an extra $250 to preclude being with anyone with an infection. But when they wheeled me to my room I saw it was a double and protested. But they said they did not have any private rooms available. Fortunately my room mate this time did not have an infection and was very quiet.
2. I didn't sleep very much the night after my implant surgery. The doc had prescribed an Ambian for me but I did not take it as those can mess up your brain. Maybe I would have slept better at home. Or maybe not.
3. If you are paying for the hospital stay yourself, the extra cost of the room could be an issue to consider.
Implant surgery by Dr. John Greisman 10/31/2012 - Installed AMS CX700