I had my surgery with Prof Remacle on Friday and so far everything went very well. Surprisingly, I am not experiencing much pain and discomfort - after reading many reports here in the forum, I expected it to be much worse. Now I am in the crucial phase of not being allowed to produce any noise for ten days. The hardest thing is to avoid coughing, and of course sometimes I just couldn't manage to do it and had to cough very gently. What I heard then was very low and male sounding, but I think that can be expected right after surgery.
One word of advice if you think about having surgery here: Except for Prof Remacle and the anesthetists, nobody here really speaks or understands English. If you don't know at least some basic French, things will be quite complicated.
The clinic itself (UCL Mont-Godinne) is a strange mix of VERY old and hyper-modern - I guess they're in a process of gradual renovation at the moment. Everyone was very friendly and competent, but of course this is a public hospital and you can't compare it to a private, commercial institution like the Yeson Voice Center. There were longer waiting times, some smaller hiccups concerning my payment via bank transfer and so on. I stayed one night after surgery and have been discharged yesterday.
Before surgery, I had an appointment with an anesthetist and a speech therapist who took a lot of measurements of my voice (yes, including the lowest male tone I could produce - very embarrassing!). She said my trained female voice was already very good (at about 200 Hz) and I explained to her that the main reason for me to have this surgery done is to reduce the effort it takes to stay in the feminine range.
Right before surgery, Prof Remacle came to talk to me and he explained the whole procedure once again. We also agreed that he would do a trachea shave in the same session. After about two hours I was brought to the operating room. I was quite nervous, but the anesthetist talked to me all the time and cleverly distracted me till I fell asleep.
I woke up again after about one and a half hours, feeling quite comfortable except for a mild soreness in my throat. After a short time they brought me to my room. The following hours were a little difficult because I had to adjust to not being able to speak and I always had the urge to remove some phlegm from my throat - virtually impossible without coughing. I guess I produced some pretty scary sounds during these first hours and of course I was afraid that I pulled out the suture. I wasn't allowed to eat or drink the first day but I wasn't hungry anyway. The first night was ok, I found that lying on the side alleviated the urge to clear my throat.
The next day I had an ENT exam (transnasal fiberscopy which means putting a little tube in your throat through your nose...) and everything looked fine. I got some prescriptions (antibiotics, pain medication which I don't needed so far, proton pump inhibitors to avoid reflux) and I also purchased a device to inhale three times a day.
Now I'm back at my hotel in Namur feeling quite comfortable. I am very curious how my voice will turn out...