realthog: ('Ronica)
realthog ([personal profile] realthog) wrote2008-08-12 02:47 pm
Entry tags:

I took my groin to the party, but nobody wanted to play


So off set [profile] pds_lit and I to the hospital this morning, Pam complaining about how early it was and me with a mouth like the bottom of a parrot's cage because I hadn't been allowed any liquid since midnight. Good cheer by the bucketful in the car, as you'll understand.

We got to the hospital.

We signed in.

We did all the paperwork.

We were put in a room to wait.

I changed into a backless gown.

We waited.

The very sweet nurse (it was Popeye's day off) came and tried to put an IV port into my left arm. My vein declined to cooperate. She successfully put an IV port into my right arm. (The failed attempt was not her fault, but my vein's. She was one of the most skilled IV-port-putter-inners I've come across, giving me almost zero pain.)

She hooked up the IV. Now at a state of dehydration that had me hallucinating unguarded toilet bowls, I faced a plump bag of clear, clean-looking, cool-looking liquid not three feet away from my parched lips.

We waited quite a long time longer, Pam doing her knitting while I read my book (Christine Wicker's Not in Kansas Anymore [2005]: recommended).

The nurse reappeared to give us the good news that the surgeon was ready to take me through to the theatre. He'd be with us soon to talk us through the procedure. In the meantime, could I possibly accoutre myself with a Texas catheter?

My jaw dropped painfully, me having visions of a Texas catheter being like a normal catheter except blowhardishly twice as long and three times as wide. Not at all, she explained. A Texas catheter is kind of like a thick-walled, open-ended condom, to the open end of which can be connected a urine bag; this saves the (male) patient having to undergo the traditional agonizing impalement.

With thoughts of Texan dimensional exaggeration still rattling around in my mind, I fretted as to whether I might have to confess in embarrassment that thoughts aren't the only thing that can rattle around in overlarge containers, but I needn't have worried: the roll-on part of a Texas catheter is coated with a fairly powerful adhesive, so there was no question of me falling out of the thing.

My worry abruptly shifted focus.

Pam, very decently, forwent the temptation to laugh like a drain at her husband's concerns, and carried on knitting.

We waited a while longer, me by now too nervous to read my book. Instead I read the face of the clock on the wall. Fun stuff.

Finally the surgeon appeared! Everything was about to swing into hi-tech motion! The next few hours would be a bit of a blur for me, as the morphine did its stuff! Tonight I'd be home, bionic in both legs! At last the waiting was ov . . .

"Do you have any open wounds?"

"Wha-wha-wha-Sorry?"

"Do you have any open wounds?"

"Just the hole in my leg where the surgeon carved out a mass of necrotic tissue."

"Let me have a look at it."

So I peeled off the elasticated bandage and gauze pads I've been wearing (well, not these exact ones, but you get the idea) for the past few weeks, and we looked at the hole. It marks the place where the bypass crew yanked out leg veins; that wound failed to heal properly, leading to the heart surgeon later having to scoop out a dollop of dead flesh about the size of a half-golfball. The wound's healing nicely, but there's still a hell of a lot of hole to fill in.

"I can't operate on you when you have an open wound like that," said this morning's surgeon. "If there's the remotest chance of infection, it's crazy ever to implant stents. Getting them in's the easy part. The surgery to get them out, should they go septic, is a nightmare. Just for a start you'd be on an IV for eight weeks . . ."

He'd convinced me.

As we chatted, he explained there'd be no problem leaving my stenting another few weeks, until the leg wound has properly healed: the arteries concerned have each about an 80% blockage, which is grim, but it isn't life-threatening -- although, of course, the situation can't be left as is indefinitely or it could become so. He said he'd have another look in four weeks or so; when I pointed out this'd clash with our hoped-for mid-September trip to the UK to Fantasycon, he happily postponed further, until early October.

Since the real big obstacle to making the trip was whether it was wise to expose recently implanted stents to pressurized cabins, it now looks certain we'll be at Fantasycon -- yahey!

Off went the surgeon.

There was still the matter of the Texas catheter, which likewise had to be off.

"Would you like me to help?" said Pam in her very best dulcets.

Images of the celebrated Christmas Cracker Effect filling my inner eye, I chose to undergo the struggle on my own. The sound was as I imagine waxing sounds. I couldn't do the manly thing and shriek piercingly because by this time, on the far side of a thin curtain, another patient had been wheeled in to fill the second half of the room. He must have wondered if I were pulling up the floor tiles.

Then, with one final mighty sound, I was free!

Is this how Laurell K. Hamilton gets the ideas for her vampire novels?

The device now had a beard.

The Texas Catheter Massacre?

I may have limped faster in my life than I limped out of that hospital this morning, but I cannot recall having done so.

Of course, the whole incident is profoundly irritating. For me, the major part of the entire operation is the steeling of myself for it in advance -- and quite a lot of steeling is required by this poor wee tim'rous, cow'ring beastie. Then there's the necessity to dehydrate for 11 or 12 hours beforehand; not easy for someone who normally drinks as much liquid as I do.

Both of these things have to be endured all over again. Grr!

A further cause of irritation is that not one of the other medical types I've seen over the past few weeks thought it could be worth mentioning to Pam and me that we might want to check in case the hole in my leg would outlaw any stenting attempts until it had fully healed. Nor had any of them noted to the stenting surgeon that I had this great, gaping, echoing, suppurating chasm in me. I saw the folk in the hospital's very own Pre-Admission Testing Dept. for a checkup just a few days ago, and they didn't see fit to mention anything to either ourselves or the surgeon. Double grr!

Well, at least it means I ought to get some work done this week . . .
 

[identity profile] fledgist.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 07:50 pm (UTC)(link)
You have my sympathy. It sounds moderately dreadful. I suspect that it will end up in a story sometime.

[identity profile] lilithsaintcrow.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 07:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Poor baby. I am ever so sorry you had to endure that.

On the bright side, though, you missed Popeye and the pink florals.

[identity profile] nick-kaufmann.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 07:58 pm (UTC)(link)
My sympathies on having to postpone after mentally preparing yourself for the surgery already. But at least you got a funny blog post out of it. ;-)

[identity profile] realthog.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 07:59 pm (UTC)(link)

I don't think there's anything funny in the slightest about this blog post.

[identity profile] realthog.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:05 pm (UTC)(link)

I knew you'd . . . understand.

[identity profile] realthog.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:05 pm (UTC)(link)

Too painful a memory to turn into fiction, mate!

[identity profile] ogre-san.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:13 pm (UTC)(link)
On behalf of all males everywhere: owie.

[identity profile] plattcave.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:13 pm (UTC)(link)
Comedy = tragedy + time.

Actually, this post was cringe-worthy. But if that's what makes Nick laugh...

[identity profile] eglady.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Aargh! How irritating! But on the bright side, sometime in October you'll have the opportunity for another shave from Popeye!

I certainly hope you aren't financially responsible for any of the implements you were hooked up to before they decided to chit chat (sigh).

--M

[identity profile] nick-kaufmann.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Nah, just lines like the catheter having a beard now and stuff were funny. I may be an awful human being, but I'm not that awful! ;-)

[identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:29 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, piss, that you have to nerve up for that again.

I cannot imagine waxing. Cannot.

[identity profile] quietselkie.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:30 pm (UTC)(link)
*sympathizes*

See, I can be nice.

I don't do it often, though. Don't tell anyone.

Did you at least get a decent cuppa as soon as possible?

[identity profile] sarcobatus.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Paul . . . oh, Paul, surely you can now agree with me that what you are enduring is infinitely more difficult than what I am enduring! You poor, poor man!

And if you were not such a damned fine writer I wouldn't be laughing right now. But your humor infused post has me in stitches (no pun intended!). Good grief, you can tell a good story.

It must be some kind of planetary alignment; Uranus has us in its cross-hairs.

This world . . . oy.

[identity profile] realthog.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:38 pm (UTC)(link)

"Comedy = tragedy + time."

I know, John -- I was joking, just winding Kaufmann up. It's good for him.

[identity profile] realthog.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:38 pm (UTC)(link)

Thanks! No wonder they're all a bit strange in Texas -- it's the catheters as makes them that way.

[identity profile] realthog.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:40 pm (UTC)(link)

"on the bright side, sometime in October you'll have the opportunity for another shave from Popeye"

On the not-so-bright side, by October there'll probably still be no need for any shaving at all, thanks to that damned device.

[identity profile] realthog.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:40 pm (UTC)(link)

And some people do it voluntarily.

[identity profile] realthog.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:42 pm (UTC)(link)

"See, I can be nice."

I'm worried.

"Did you at least get a decent cuppa as soon as possible?"

Nope. I'm still on effing decaff. Wouldn't be so bad if I still had some of the Sainsbury's Red Label decaff my daughter brought over from the UK, but I've finished that now and am on to the Bromley I bought from the local supermarket. Not good.

[identity profile] realthog.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:45 pm (UTC)(link)

"surely you can now agree with me that what you are enduring is infinitely more difficult than what I am enduring"

Not in the slightest . . . although the irony hasn't escaped me that we both steeled ourselves for something traumatic this morning and both ended up with anti-climax.

I'm so so so pleased about your anti-climax; all the way home in the car Pam and I were wondering how things were going for you.

[identity profile] louismaistros.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:46 pm (UTC)(link)
"The device now had a beard."

Paul, you kill me. Leave it to you to describe something utterly horrible and leave me in stitches (pun not intended).

Do they really call it a Texas catheter? They should really call it something else. Like maybe the "hey-this-isn't-as-bad as-it-looks catheter."

Very best wishes to you.

[identity profile] fledgist.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 08:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Right now, yes. In a year?

[identity profile] sarcobatus.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 09:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Your anti-climax is much worse than mine.

And you were able to write about it without using a single expletive. Not so with me, alas.

The bearded catheter of Texas size proportions killed me. And Pam, with her dulcet voice, asking you if she could be of assistance. I'm sorry, Paul, but you're just too good, too good.

[identity profile] sartorias.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 09:03 pm (UTC)(link)
And some pierce bits of flesh that I howl is something bumps them. All kinds to make a world!

[identity profile] fledgist.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 09:15 pm (UTC)(link)
No, it's the toast.

[identity profile] fledgist.livejournal.com 2008-08-12 09:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Para os beneficios da cidania brasileira.

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