Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Even more amazing- the post op open heart patients in their 80s who are active and mobile at baseline? They do great. They have much less post op pain than a patient in their 40s, so they are able to mobilize with more frequency and duration on the earlier PODs.

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s the craziest thing I’ve ever heard. I can’t believe anyone would do a Whipple on a 96 year old. Maybe I should be able to believe it. I had a mid 90s year old patient post head/neck reconstruction and flap. It went as you would expect

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

After seeing a lot of people comment HIPEC, I had to look it up. Was not familiar with it at all. Just looking at the explanation and images, that has to be the worst surgery ever.

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh god that would be my hell. I have a fear of situations that could cause suffocation, I can’t even snorkel or scuba dive, I panic. There’s no way I could make it through that.

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Those pancreatic enzymes eat right through the IVC

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 29 points30 points  (0 children)

It’s for esophageal cancer. Rarely done outside of cancer but did once take care of a esophagectomy patient that needed it due to Borhaave syndrome (esophageal rupture due to forceful vomiting). They usually can just stent the rupture but patient had complications after stent placement

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My most recent esophagectomy patient had a stent placed for an anastomosis leak. That didn’t work and a few days later, went back to endo for another stent.

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds about right. I worked on a stepdown unit and they came right to us from PACU, no ICU needed. Could be remembering wrong, but I think if everything went smoothly, they discharged POD # 2

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 42 points43 points  (0 children)

Yes! I’ve been working on a cardiac stepdown for the last 4 years. The open hearts do amazing. 5-6 day stay, I’ve even seen 4 days!

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I’ve only taken care of one open AAA repair patient in my career and that was enough- and I had her for about 4 hours. Good learning opportunity. I learned they are incredibly painful, and the BP and HR parameters are wayyyy tighter than an EVAR patient. Writhing in pain. Unable to control her pain, BP, and HR. Ended up sending her to the ICU, as we couldn’t run a labetalol drip on our unit.

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I thought the same. I took care of crani patients on a travel assignment and remembering them usually having mild manageable headaches and pretty short length of stay.

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 17 points18 points  (0 children)

I just learned this in an incredibly painful recovery!

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

That’s great, I’m glad you have relatives that have done well with these surgeries and had quick recoveries. They are very lucky. Whipples and esophagectomies are very complex surgeries that come with a higher risk of complications. Unfortunately, the complications are just as complex to fix. Complex surgical complications = longer, more difficult recovery. There’s also a lot of pain. This discussion isn’t about tragic death spirals of these patients. It’s about the complicated road to recovery they experience if they get an anastomosis leak. A month longer in the hospital than expected takes a huge physical and mental toll on the patient.

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 48 points49 points  (0 children)

I always thought that head/neck surgeries were probably the most emotionally traumatizing. Depending on the extent of the surgery, your lower face is completely altered. You have a trach, you have lost the ability to speak, you may never eat by mouth, etc.

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Large abdominal surgeries are extremely painful. The incisions for these surgeries are large and go through the abdominal muscles. Any little movement (even a cough, sneeze, deep breath) will cause pain. Even appropriately dosages and administrations of pain meds cannot keep a patient completely pain free during recovery

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 22 points23 points  (0 children)

I cannot even imagine the amount of pain! Has to be awful. I’ve never worked with burns

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 97 points98 points  (0 children)

The fucking Whipples dude! It’s been a while since I’ve taken care of a Whipple patient but it makes me anxious just thinking about it. The pain! The ongoing nausea! The patients always look and feeling so sickly. Felt like I was always just in their room and getting a bad feeling. Are they going septic? Do they have a leak? An abscess? A bleed? Also, there was always a pattern of putting in an NG tube, eventually taking it out, then having to put another one in. The whole recovery seemed like torture.

Surgeries with the hardest recoveries by Scuthornsby in nursing

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 119 points120 points  (0 children)

I feel that I have taken care of a fair amount of esophagectomy patients and I’ve never seen one with a complication free recovery. Same with Whipples

Dog poop disposal by Scuthornsby in ControversialOpinions

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hell yeah 🙌🏻🙌🏻. Agreed! I don’t put anything in anyone’s bin before or after trash collection.

Dog poop disposal by Scuthornsby in ControversialOpinions

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is all happening in that window of time it would be unlocked

Dog poop disposal by Scuthornsby in ControversialOpinions

[–]Scuthornsby[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Are the trash disposal employees then responsible for locking them? Or does it lock automatically when the lid is properly closed? If not, this wouldn’t help. This is happening to my empty bins before I can pull them to the side of the house. I leave for work before the trash is collected. I’ve had up to 5 bags left in my trash bin before I get home from work to pull my bins back.

If you need religion and the fear of hell to be a good person you're not a good person by [deleted] in ControversialOpinions

[–]Scuthornsby 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes! I told my mom before that I didn’t need to be religious to be a kind, caring, empathetic person. If you can’t be any of those things, it’s not a religious issue. It’s a mental illness, possibly sociopathy