Life's too short, so had the surgery yesterday and it went swimmingly, you're really in professional hands! I arrived at 8:30am which the surgery was scheduled for, I did have to wait around for an hour and half, in that time I spoke to a few nurses and had to sign a few consent forms and was given contact numbers if there was ever an emergency while I'm back home.
Dr. Karidis came in to see how I was doing and to take a few photos of my pre-op chest and reassured me again that the procedure is simple and he will make my chest exactly how I want.
You're taken in to see the anaesthetist who was really funny, cracked a few jokes and made me feel at ease, they'll start asking you about what you do for a living while attaching a cannula to your arm, the anaesthetic will start to make you feel a bit drunk and they place an oxygen mask over you for breathing and boom! Next thing you know, you're being wheeled into the recovery room and the surgery is complete. I had a very vivid dream of becoming a famous DJ and I'm pretty sure I was rambling at the doctors before realising where I was, hope you have fun with that.
It will ache after the surgery, nothing crazy but I'll compare it to the day after a heavy chest workout at the gym. They did give me a lot of morphine but it had no effect on me which is a shame, because I hear thats the best bit, seems I'm hard to knockout! They will attach a cold pack around your chest which just fills with ice cold liquid to help with the swelling and the pain in your chest (I'll iterate again how bearable the pain is, it's more of an aching.)
You'll be taken back to your own private hospital room with a TV and private bathroom, and you'll be served food and drink once they feel you are not nauseous and ready to eat. They will frequently visit your room to check your blood pressure and heart rate every half an hour. I was there for 4 hours after my surgery before I released, managed to catch up on the new Twin Peaks series during that time so it went by pretty quickly.
One of Karidis' patient consultant nurses will come in near the end of your stay and give you all the post care equipment you need to take home with you; Arnica tablets (which are a homeopathic tablet that helps relieve the bruising) which you have to take 5 times daily, Codydramol (which are a painkiller) which have to be taken every 4-6 hours and no more than 8 pills a day, along with a Lactulose (the painkillers can cause constipation so this liquid just relives those symptons) which is meant to be drank twice a day. After 5 days of these tablets the dosages go down. You will be provided with a cover to lay on your bed incase you ooze from the incisions (mine has had very little oozing) and most importantly you will be given 2 compressions vests which you must wear for 24 hours a day for 2 weeks (you can remove these when you shower), and then the 2 weeks following that you will have to wear regularly.
One thing that struck me that a lot of people complained about him not doing, is
Dr. Karidis himself actually came to visit me after my surgery, shook my hand, told me the procedure went perfectly with no complications and that he looked forward to seeing me at my six week review meeting. It was a nice touch and made me feel more confident about everything.
My photos are too big to upload at the moment, but once I get this compression vest off for the first time to take a clear picture of the current results I will upload some before and after photos for you.
The sneak peek I got after the surgery blew me away, I've never looked down and seen a flat chest before, can't describe the feeling but I just felt a wave of insecurities just go away. I know the recovery journey will take long but I already can see this was the best decision I could've made!
Good luck to everyone who's booked in with Karidis, will keep updated on my recovery!