Archive for the ‘Pain Relief’ category

Gallbladder Surgery – Part 2

February 23rd, 2011
Jonathan Blood-smyth asked:




Care after the operation

Stitches and clips If the surgeon has used sub-cuticular clips then they do not need removal but if skin clips or stitches are employed then removal will be required at about a week after insertion. The small incisions are often controlled by using adhesive strips which gradually come off in whilst showering. Patients should be given clear advice on managing their wounds and stitches.

Recovery issues

Going home This depends on how fit the patient is, who is at home with them and how comfortable they are after the operation. Most patients after laparoscopic cholecystectomy should be able to go home within 1 or 2 days of the operation. After an open operation it is common to need to stay a day or two longer. In general a person can go home as soon as they feel able to do so.

Analgesia and pain After a cholecystectomy patients vary in the discomfort they feel, with some having remarkably little pain but most with some symptoms of pain during the first three to four days. The sites of incision are the normal area but patients may experience shoulder pain which is usually secondary to irritation of the diaphragm during the procedure. These symptoms of discomfort settle as the absorption of carbon dioxide into the bloodstream completes. Typical advice is to use analgesia in the short period after the operation so that a gradual activity increase can occur and sleep achieved. By the fifth to the tenth day all the pain should have resolved. Open operative procedures lead to slightly slower recovery.

Having a bath and shower Soap and water can be applied to the wound area either by showering or having a bath after around two days. A transparent wound dressing is used by some surgeons, left in place for a while and washing or bathing can continue with it on. Patients will usually be advised about this. Swimming is best avoided for about ten days or so until wound healing is well advanced.

Getting up walking Patients can get up and walk around as soon as they wish and for as much as they wish. Due to some pain and stiffness they may not feel like walking longer distances for about seven days or so.

Driving a car Patients need to feel able and confident that they can control a car in an emergency situation before they drive, taking a few days to reach this point.

Sport, heavy lifting and work Return to work can be accomplished as soon as a patient feels comfortable enough to cope with the job demands. Home or part-time workers can usually resume work very soon after the event. Driving to work or spending a lot of the day on the feet delays work return for about two weeks. Full time work is usually achievable for most people after laparoscopic operation by ten days from the procedure but if they have had an open operation this will be a few days more.

Patients can get back to sport and other physical activity as soon as their discomfort allows. It is sensible to start these activities gradually and work steadily back to full fitness. Violent or contact sports are best avoided for about 1 month.

Side effects which might occur The sites where the telescopes have been inserted or the wound site in an open operation usually suffer some swelling, bruising and hardness. Fluid and blood collection under the wound causes the hardness and swelling initially, added to by the drawing together of the stitches and then by scar tissue formation.

What problems can occur after a cholecystectomy?

Haematoma The possibility of bleeding occurring has been mentioned already but at times there can be extensive bleeding if a small artery or vein under the wound bleeds for a while after the operation. This looks like a firm lump and usually settles down without treatment.

Wound infection A wound infection is possible but not common. Wound redness developing may necessitate the use of antibiotics. If the wound should drain pus then it may need reoperation to let out the infection.



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Effective Communication

February 23rd, 2011
HBF Health Funds asked:




This is rather an extreme example of how things can sometimes go wrong in effective communication within the medical fraternity. But another lesson I was taught by my first registrar has also stayed with me; and although it initially may appear to be rather harsh, there is some truth in it. He told me that “all patients are liars”. I suspect that what he was really saying was that in some instances you mustn’t take what people say literally, or put your own interpretation on what others have said. Never the less, I have to admit that some groups of patients, such as drug addicts, do need special care and attention when communicating with them.

There are many reasons why the level of communication can break down between doctor and patient.

One of the biggest changes in medicine in the last 20 years has been the change that has occurred in general practice. Nowadays, the vast majority of GPs are part-timers, and those who are full time tend to be male and in their late 50s and will be retiring in the next few years. What this means is that it has become much more difficult to have ‘your own’ GP and for a relationship to develop whereby easy communication thrives, time is one of the essential ingredients. This can become more difficult if you are seeing a different doctor on each visit. The other tragic change in the style of general practice is the almost total loss of the ‘home visit’.

Over the decades I can remember many occasions when family members have rung me to say that they are very concerned about their ageing parents. Often it would have come as a bit of a surprise! The reason? Many of these older patients, particularly the women, see going to the doctor as a bit of an outing and get all dressed up in their best clothes and put on a smiling face! Most never complain about the downside of ageing, despite creaking joints, failing eyesight and diminishing hearing!

Over the years I have found that keeping up a routine of home visits has allowed me a privileged insight into how many of our older citizens live, and in a great many cases, it’s not always a reassuring sight! Poor lighting, loose carpets, steps up and steps down, food left out on surfaces, electric cables running across the floor and medicines in all sorts of containers and many just left lying where they dropped! And if GPs don’t do home visits, they’ll never know any of this. So the GPs have some work to do to lift the level of good communication and understanding of their patients. Patients too must play their part; after all it is their health, which is of prime concern at each medical consultation.

Try and describe in your own language what is concerning you. Often it may help to write it down. Also, there may be several things that concern you – the famous list which makes many GPs quake in their boots!! – And you should be aware that if that’s the case, then it may take several visits to actually go through the whole list. Always try and start with the one problem that is really concerning you – again GPs really get toey after having been through a long consultation, (usually with a full waiting room), when the departing patient says at the door something like “oh, and I nearly forgot, is it important if you bleed from the bowel?”.

Finally the practice of good medicine depends on trust. Patients have to be able to share their most intimate secrets with their doctors, knowing that the information will be sacrosanct. To doctors, this is a part of their creed, though sadly this can sometimes be forgotten, but to someone sick for the first time it can be a difficult thing for them to open up to a total stranger.

All of us need to be aware that medicine is first and foremost a caring profession, and if we focus on being caring people, then free and effective communication gets easier and easier.



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Asthma

February 16th, 2011
HBF Health Funds asked:




Asthma is a disease in which the patient will wheeze. However not everyone who wheezes has asthma and this often presents some challenges to the physician, especially in the first year or so of life. Isolated wheezing can occur with minor airways obstruction, for example when “something goes down the wrong way” and along with the spluttering goes a short lived wheeze. You can also get a wheeze with chest infections such as bronchitis but in both of these scenarios, the external stimulus to wheezing is temporary, and once it has been removed the wheeze disappears. In people with asthma, something else is going on which causes them to wheeze with far more minor stimulations and this can be associated with shortness of breath, waking up at night short of breath and in some cases can even be life-threatening.

So what happens in asthma? First a quick anatomy lesson, inhaled air enters the lungs via your windpipe that then divides into two main branches or bronchi with one to the right lung and one to the left lung. These main bronchi continue to divide into smaller and smaller tubes finally ending in what we term the alveolus, which is where the business end of oxygen and carbon dioxide transfer happens. But it’s in the smaller tubes, or airways, where asthma has its pathological effects. The walls of these small tubes are encircled by a muscle that helps control the diameter of the tube and in asthma this muscle tends to get thicker and more reactive to normal stimuli. The lining of these fine tubes has a special membrane which secretes a watery mucous to trap any dust particles. These dust particles are then gently wafted towards the outside by microscopic cilia (which are like tiny hairs) to be coughed up or swallowed depending on the quantity produced. In asthma, this inner surface becomes inflamed and thick and in combination with the thickened muscular layer causes the overall inner diameter of the tube to be narrower in the resting state! Also the mucous produced tends to become thicker and stickier and more difficult to push towards the outside.

It’s important to understand what is happening in asthma so that you can understand why there are two arms to the current approach to managing and controlling the problem. Doctors talk about ‘relievers’ which are aimed at reducing the spasm in those circular muscles and help open up the airways during an asthma attack. But if the underlying inflammation and thickening are not also targeted, then the disease will not be fully controlled and hence the second string to the medical bow are the ‘preventers’. Preventers are generally inhaled steroids and designed to counteract the inflammation and thickening of the airways. It is vitally important that all patients with asthma, or parents of children with asthma, have a basic understanding of what is happening with the disease and remain committed to good preventative measures. The cornerstone of good preventative measures is correct use of appropriate inhalers and to know what to do in the case of unexpected deterioration during an asthma attack. It is also important that people with asthma do not smoke and avoid all exposure to tobacco smoke and toxic fumes.

Asthma does tend to run in families, it is associated with skin conditions such as eczema and dermatitis and people with asthma do tend to suffer more from allergies. When diagnosing a patient who presents with a wheezy cough, all of the above mentioned factors need to be taken into account and investigated appropriately. If the diagnosis of asthma is confirmed, then all asthma patients, their families and schools should be given an asthma action plan so that their asthma can be managed effectively and there is a plan for emergency situations.

Finally, everyone, including people with asthma, can do a great deal to improve fitness and health by being fit and active, keeping to a healthy weight, not smoking and getting an annual flu shot.

HBF Family Doctor Duncan Jefferson.

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