The thread title is the terminology used by my newest surgeon to characterize the nature of the surgery the I need to correct the fact that my small bowel ― the only bowel I have left since my colon/large bowel was completely removed years ago ― has herniated so deeply into my left groin that blood vessels in the groin are being constricted so has to cause painful swelling all the way from the groin to the bottom of my left foot.
Nine years ago my first surgeon ― now retired ― recommended that we leave bad enough alone, as the compression of arteries and veins in the groin had not yet become as severe as is now the case. He explained that my history of multiple abdominal surgeries ― a colostomy that prolapsed after only 3 months; an ileostomy that failed due to an adhesion (a spaghetti-shaped strand of scar tissue strangled my small intestine); an infection of the surgical incision at the time of the latter surgery that caused the surgeon to take out all the staples and use his index finger to rip the incision open so as to maximize his ability to get rid of the infection (which at the time was his sole priority); thus, I was left with a full-belly hernia that the surgeon characterized as "big enough to throw a cat through" and therefore not a problem that needed to be fixed because surgeons fix hernias to prevent strangulation of the intestine, and there was no danger of my hernia strangling anything because the hole in my belly was too big to strangle anything. But, alas, that was then and this is now, when nothing is constricting my small intestine, but the intestine itself is doing the constricting of artery and vein in the groin.
I am due for a CAT scan Monday, after which the surgeon will consult his 24 surgical partners ― in his UNC related group ― to see if they can jointly figure out a way to attempt to solve a "complex" surgical challenge.
My first surgeon, who was chief of surgery at Western Wake Hospital at the time, said that if he were to attempt the complex surgery that I needed nine years ago, that he would probably have several fellow surgeons with him in the operating room saying, "We want to see how you are going to do this."
My current surgeon does not yet know how he might do what needs to be done, but he hopes that when he and his many colleagues review what they find in the Cat scan pictures, they may be able to collectively figure a way to attempt the "complex abdominal reconstruction" that is needed.
I am being processed by a cardiologist through a number of heart tests that are prerequisite to abdominal surgery on an 82 year-old with multiple cardiac anomalies.
I am at a point where I have wishful fantasies of heart failure sans resuscitation during the surgery; however, I do not expect that I will be so fortunate, as the health professionals that are dealing with my case are just too competent to allow such to happen.
I am aware that this OP is too verbose and needs to be radically edited, but I don't have sufficient energy to do so this late at night. And tomorrow I would probably just delete the whole thing.
Nine years ago my first surgeon ― now retired ― recommended that we leave bad enough alone, as the compression of arteries and veins in the groin had not yet become as severe as is now the case. He explained that my history of multiple abdominal surgeries ― a colostomy that prolapsed after only 3 months; an ileostomy that failed due to an adhesion (a spaghetti-shaped strand of scar tissue strangled my small intestine); an infection of the surgical incision at the time of the latter surgery that caused the surgeon to take out all the staples and use his index finger to rip the incision open so as to maximize his ability to get rid of the infection (which at the time was his sole priority); thus, I was left with a full-belly hernia that the surgeon characterized as "big enough to throw a cat through" and therefore not a problem that needed to be fixed because surgeons fix hernias to prevent strangulation of the intestine, and there was no danger of my hernia strangling anything because the hole in my belly was too big to strangle anything. But, alas, that was then and this is now, when nothing is constricting my small intestine, but the intestine itself is doing the constricting of artery and vein in the groin.
I am due for a CAT scan Monday, after which the surgeon will consult his 24 surgical partners ― in his UNC related group ― to see if they can jointly figure out a way to attempt to solve a "complex" surgical challenge.
My first surgeon, who was chief of surgery at Western Wake Hospital at the time, said that if he were to attempt the complex surgery that I needed nine years ago, that he would probably have several fellow surgeons with him in the operating room saying, "We want to see how you are going to do this."
My current surgeon does not yet know how he might do what needs to be done, but he hopes that when he and his many colleagues review what they find in the Cat scan pictures, they may be able to collectively figure a way to attempt the "complex abdominal reconstruction" that is needed.
I am being processed by a cardiologist through a number of heart tests that are prerequisite to abdominal surgery on an 82 year-old with multiple cardiac anomalies.
I am at a point where I have wishful fantasies of heart failure sans resuscitation during the surgery; however, I do not expect that I will be so fortunate, as the health professionals that are dealing with my case are just too competent to allow such to happen.
I am aware that this OP is too verbose and needs to be radically edited, but I don't have sufficient energy to do so this late at night. And tomorrow I would probably just delete the whole thing.
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