After three hours of what Dr. Phillips termed "very aggressive" surgery and needing three units of blood during surgery, Judy spent a calm night in ICU, according to the nurses.
She is still hooked up to a ventilator, just in case. She is breathing fine on her own, and the machine is just meant to assist if she needs it. From what I understand, those nasty-looking tubes will be removed today. Because of the tube she cannot speak. She is drifting in and out of sleep, with only about 10 to 15 seconds of full clarity before wandering off again.
She was obviously elated when I told her that taking out the affected section of her colon did not require a colostomy—she really had been worried about that. And she showed great relief over all the other news that I have been feeding her by-and-by. I don't know how much of what I have been telling her actually is going to stay in long-term memory, but I can tell the relief when she registers what I am saying.
She is not in very much pain; she indicated pain levels ranging from 0 to 2 on the scale to 10. She has a pain-pump (morphine) but has used very little of it. She is obviously bugged by the ventilator tube because she cannot talk, but she understands that it is necessary and is only temporary.
The nurse just changed the dressing on her incision, and I decided to watch. The incision is in a slight S-curve, a little less than about a foot long, starting right in the area where the rib cage opens and going maybe two to three inches below the belly button. The doc used staples, and the nurse was very happy with the way the entire area looked—no leakage, just a few small areas with some bruising, just really, really clean. On the inside, I was told, the doc used sutures to reattach the muscles that had to be cut. The nurse said that from the way the wound looks she would heal up fairly fast. Now I have a baseline to see how the healing process is coming along. Still, I don't think I'll enter the nursing profession anytime soon.
I also had a chance to talk to Dr. Phillips when he made his rounds this morning. It was at that time that he told me that he was "very aggressive." Yesterday he had mentioned that there was a 1 to 2 cm growth that he had not been able to remove, and I asked him more about it. He said that it was some growth in the Cecum area, in the vicinity of the appendix. To remove it he would have had to cut another, albeit small, piece of bowel and reattach the ends, and he did not want to take this risk. He is positive that chemo will take care of this area.
So, for right now we're just hanging out in ICU. Once we get out of here, Judy will be in room 519, with fine afternoon sun and a view of the lake in Maxey park. I am glad about Judy's high spirits, which are evidenced by a few thumbs-up and other little things that she has indicated with her eyes and the attempt at a smile—tough to do with all that tape that holds those tubes in place.
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Once again, thank you for all your support.
Jürgen