Quote from: Jay on August 04, 2009, 02:09:48 AM
Flame boy could you help me out at all?
Jay
Sure can, dude!
I had my hysto last December, so it's recent enough to still be relevant.
I was in hospital for 3 nights, one being the night before surgery. I was off work for 4 weeks altogether; my GP wanted to sign me off for another 2 weeks, but I told him I felt fine and that as I do a desk job it wouldn't be a problem. I would probably have been OK to go back sooner, but since I get full pay I didn't feel any need to rush it.
I was up and about less than a week after my surgery though, going shopping etc - though I had a friend with me to carry bags etc.
I was advised not to do any heavy lifting or housework for 3 months, though I probably didn't leave it that long as my partner was, ahem, keen for me to resume hoovering!
The pain wasn't bad at all, nowhere near as bad as I'd expected. It was fairly intense as soon as I woke up, but I was given morphine immediately, and had access to the morphine in self-administered form for the first night. After that, I had pain killers that were given to me by the hospital, but I didn't need them all anyway.
I felt different in that it was really important psychologically for me to have a hysto. I didn't feel any different physically, or any feeling of emptiness. And I haven't noticed any difference at all sexually.
I had a laparoscopic hysto - not trans-vaginal at all. When I saw the consultant for my initial appointment, he asked me about whether I'd had vaginal intercourse, and based on my reply (no) he said that I wasn't a good candidate for a trans-vaginal hysto, and so he would do the surgery laparoscopically if possible - he explained there was always a risk that it would not be possible and he'd have to revert to the abdominal method after starting the surgery - but that if this was necessary he would make a vertical scar rather than the traditional horizontal scar which is only ever used for hystos and therefore would be a huge give-away if it was ever spotted by anyone who had an idea about these things - this was the advice given in my referral letter from the GIC.
Because he was planning to do the surgery laparoscopically, I didn't need to have any sort of internal examination prior to the surgery - I would have been extremely uncomfortable with having one and would possibly have opted for the abdominal method if that had been the only other option. Fortunately my surgeon understood this and this was a second reason why he suggested the non-trans-vaginal laparoscopic method for me.
Hope that helps mate!