I have have recently had this same surgery. I'm going on 19 days and on my 3rd day back to work. First off I would like to say this is by far the worse pain i have ever experienced in my short life of 27 yrs old. 10 to 14 days off is no where near enough time to be healed and head back to work. I expected the worse, but god it was 10x more painful then i imagined. I'm still dealing with swelling of the skin and a painful lump that my doctor explains is swelled tissue from surgery and will eventually go away. For the first week and 1/2 i probably took about 10-15 showers and soaks a day, just to ease the pain and tightness. Along with the oozing of brown/tan fluid that I was told is part of the post surgery, your body getting rid of the bad stuff so its pushing it out of the wound.
I guess all i really hope and pray for is for all of this pain to eventually go away and feel like my normal self again. It's pretty bad when you are afraid to venture out of your home or go out to dinner in fear of what may come after that. Iv'e lost about 15lbs due to the surgery and I still can't manage to keep food down. My guess....living on jello and crackers has really took my stomach for a ride. Anyways good luck to all!
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Thanks for the advice everyone ...light at the end of the tunnel ?
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I am 4 days in to my recovery from my hemorroidectomy (SP). I really have to share, first of all, that one of the most distressing parts of my summary experience has been reading some of the posts on this board and the enhanced anxiety I have experienced as a result. I so do not want to diminish or minimize the experiences of other posters but, rather, would like to share mine.<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />
Upon discharge from the hospital (out-patient) I arrived home and was HUNGRY. My first mistake was not immediately honoring a disciplined high-fiber intake of food instead opting to consume some left over pasta that was sitting around. Constipation is your enemy and you are "pre-disastered" in this regard as a result of the general anesthesia, the saline drip, and the prescription pain killers prescribed. All of these factors are constipating. K... my pasta binge was a really bad idea but I'll cut myself some slack because I was still emerging from the GA and wasn't really lucid. Once I had gathered my wits and assessed my predicament I consumed gallons of water and home made juice (carrot, celery, pineapple, apple, kale) from my juicing machine. These were all good things although this level of fluid consumption lead to its own problems which I will discuss in a bit. I made the mistake of reading a post where the individual described his posturing for his first bowel movement with some prep which included popping some vicodin just before the movement to "allow it time to kick in". I did this and this was a bad idea; as I felt a BM developing, I took a vicodin and the whole process came to a grinding halt- remember, vicodin is constipating. After this mis-fire, I was scampering to reinitiate the "firing sequence" resorting to stool softeners and milk of magnesia all to no avail. I began to back up, this was putting pressure on my bowel and I was just uncomfortable, not in pain, but uncomfy. My apprehension about my first BM only amped up my discomfort. One thing, and one thing only, got my bowel in motion; prune juice. No sh*t (well, actually... quite the contrary...) Prune juice had fairly immediate effects. I strongly suggest it. The wrap on this paragraph is simply this- Don't let yourself get backed up and certainly do not do so for fear of the pain of the inevitable bowel movement. THE thing which will make that inevitable movement painful is if you allow yourself to become constipated and your feces become compacted.
I can't speak for the why or whether the following is applicable to ladies or not since they are absent a prostate gland. The first 12 hours after discharge I could not urinate while simultaneously consuming huge quantities of liquid. This was bad. It felt like a swollen prostate but, understanding that when I get my prostate checked, it is checked via my rectum, all of these things are close neighbors and if my rectum was swollen, it could have impacted my prostate. If I have any nugget of intellectual gold to share from whole ordeal it was this; stand in a bath tub, turn on the water and let it run. I dunno, maybe I'm weird but the sound of the running water immediate popped my cork and I could held my own against two twenty ounce bottles of Miller High Life poured simultaneously at my feet.
So, four days in to it, I can genuinely report that ANY pain I have experienced has paled in comparison to the burning I routinely experienced over the past 9 months after a bowel movement. Today, I still hurt a bit, but I'm already better off. Don't let yourself get constipated, consume gobs of water, and don't get in a tizzy over the first BM; it is so not a big deal. Allow yourself plenty of sleep since when we're exhausted our ability to manage anxiety is compromised. When awake, move around; body movement assists the intestines with the movement of waste. Manage pain as sparingly as possible. The ointment I received from the hospital proved highly effective. I was prescribed 800mg ibuprophen and some high octane vicodin. K... I get it; the vicodin is a nice ride but it just messes you up and I haven't touched it since the first day simply because it is so constipating. I have resorted to the ibuprophen because it reduces swelling and effectively manages pain and is sedative so it helps me sleep but it, too, is constipating. If you take all the vicodin the dosage allows, you will ultimately be in a world of hurt.
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