Quote from: Cindy James on May 09, 2012, 03:40:39 AM
That said SRS is considered (MtF) a low risk procedure given that it occurs in a good hospital by qualified staff and appropriate after care. I think FtM including top and bottom surgery is a higher risk because of the potential blood loss, but hysterectomies are performed very routinely.
You have it flipped around, Laparoscopic Hysterectomy is low risk and can be performed in an out patient surgical suite, as is mastectomy, whether elective or for cancer. MtF SRS is a moderate risk surgery. It certainly carries less risk than surgeries that require opening of the thoracic or abdominal cavities, but it is an inpatient surgical procedure.
Quote from: Cindy James on May 09, 2012, 04:52:11 AM
To be pedantic (sorry) those deaths are not due to SRS they are due to any surgical event or even anaesthetic event. Once your number is up, it's up. I think the OP was interested in SRS related deaths. As we know any surgical event is major, even if I classified them as low or medium risk, they are a higher than no event at all.
Most surgical deaths are post-operative, not intraoperative, except maybe in trauma, but don't quote me on that. Anesthesia carries a risk, surgery carries a risk (infection, embolism, etc), and inpatient recovery carries a risk (infection, embolism, etc).
Quote from: Cindy James on May 09, 2012, 04:52:11 AM
I have had people go into shock after putting a needle into an arm vein to take 10 mls of blood.
A vaso-vagal reaction is VERY different from a Pulmonary Embolism or Hospital Acquired Pneumonia.