Surface Hippy® - Guide To Hip Resurfacing

Serving The Patient Community Since 12/11/2005     Patricia Walter Owner/Webmaster

Clusty

To Advertise
Contact Patricia
2000+ Unique Visitors a day

Hip Resurfacing News

 

Brian - About being Skinny and having a BHR
RBHR  6/28/08  Dr. John Lannin

I'm a very skinny person. My body fat is in the less than 2% range, so hard to measure exactly. I know many people envy such a condition but it is just the way I was born. For the benefit of other thin people anticipating a BHR, I'd like you to know there are potential complications.

1.) Damage from surgical clamps

One day post-op, after the epidural was removed, I noticed the skin on the anterior thigh was numb. The surgeon and his assistant speculated that the clamps normally used to stabilize the pelvis during surgery don't have much padding. Since I had so little padding, they probably damaged the subcutaneous femoral nerve. Two days later the numbness had vanished, so no big deal. But if I were a thin patient I would advise the surgeon to add some padding to that clamp for me!

2.) No place to inject the Lovenox

For 1 week post-op, one must self-administer anticoagulant injections into the
subcutaneous fat, usually in one's "love handles" on the side of the abdomen. The drug is absorbed into the fatty tissues. With only a millimeter of subcutaneous fat, I struggled to get the full injection under the skin. It would usually produce a bulge under the skin that would subsequently disperse over a period of about 20 minutes. I don't know of a solution for this, but be prepared for the challenge!

3.) Food post-surgery

Because one must fast for 12 hours before surgery, and the hospital will likely offer little or no food for 12 hours post surgery, a thin person can feel pretty famished. I recommend you bring snack foods to the hospital and put them in easy reach so you can eat whenever you need to. The nursing staff at Stanford Hospital had only milk and apple juice on hand. I think it is bad to be hungry at any time during recovery.

4.) Weight loss

I lost 5 pounds following surgery, and today, six weeks post-op, I'm still trying to gain it back. I suppose most of the weight loss is muscle atrophy, and I know I will gain it eventually. I just want to stress it is so important to have lots of good food on hand and easily had, especially if you are largely on your own after returning home from hospital. Smoothies always taste good, and are easy to make if you have the stuff on hand. Sometimes it is tough to cook when you are hungry and tired and doped up, too.

Brian
R-BHR 6/28/08
Dr. John Lannin
 

Advertisement


View My Stats

Statistics Page

Web design by Patricia Walter Copyright Surface Hippy® 12/11/2005

Mission Statement - Surface Hippy® is a patient to patient guide to hip resurfacing. It does not provide medical advice. It is designed to support, not to replace, the relationship between patient and clinician.
Advertising - Revenue from this site is derived from commercial advertising and individual donations.
Any advertisement is distinguished by the word "advertisement"
Privacy - Surface Hippy® does not share email addresses or personal information with any group or organization.
Content - Surface Hippy® is not controlled or influenced by any medical companies, doctors or hospitals.
All content is controlled by Patricia Walter  -
Joint Health Sites  LLC
This site is published by Joint Health Sites LLC, which is solely responsible for its content.
The advertisements on this site are not intended by the advertisers as an endorsement of the site's content.
The advertisers shall not be liable for any errors or omissions in the site's content,
nor liable for any damages from any person's actions based in reliance on the site's content.