Okay. So here's the deal.

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After a sleepless night (up at 1AM and couldn't get back to sleep) I was picked up at 6AM for the trip to the VA hospital in Buffalo N.Y. It snowed all the way there, sometimes reducing visibility to less than 100 feet. The roads, even the interstate, were not good at all, and we saw many cars and trucks off the road in the ditches.

A trip that usually takes about 2-2 1/2 hours, took more than three, what with stopping to pick up other people also headed to the hospital. After we arrived, I had almost three hours to wait before my appointment, so I went to the lounge... yes, the smokers lounge... and took out the laptop to try to connect to the internet. No joy, so I read some of the stories I've downloaded.

The Appointment: I was first examined by a couple of trainees... students, if you will, who preliminarily diagnosed a possible hernia. To say it was a painful experience would be damning it with faint praise. Folks, it HURT! Then, they went to discuss their findings with a resident. They came back, REDID the exam... more pain. Sigh.

During all of tis I was pleading for them to just take the two little pains in my... life, if they were going to have to operate for the hernia anyway, and since it seemed as if one of them was indirectly involved in what was happening in my groin area anyway. No response from the students.

FINALLY, the resident arrived and repeated the exam, but with much more vigor, causing much more pain... I almost passed out. He seemed to believe that what is happening is a hernia, although he did express concern over the involvement of the testicle, which it seemed he was about to crush. Can you say OW? Sure you can... I knew you could.

Sooooooo... now I have to have another ultrasound done on the area, likely followed by scheduling for surgery on the hernia... and hopefully, as long as they're in the area, removal of one or both of the little pains in my... life. I'm scheduled for the ultrasound in March.

The trip home took four hours, what with the snow,and delays for accidents. We saw at least four tractor-trailers either off the road, or outright crashed, some of them looked pretty serious... I hope no one was hurt. There were seven or eight cars also in the ditches, or crashed. I finally got through the door of my house at 7 PM, and just unpacked, and fell into bed, after my short blog. 12 or so hours later, here I am... more or less awake and semi-coherent.

I cannot possibly express my gratitude to those of you who responded to my blog entries with compassion and love. You lifted my spirits and re-affirmed the fact that we are, indeed, a family here, and I thank you all, from my heart. I am just going to take things real easy between now and whenever I'm scheduled for the surgery. I do know that any surgery carries with it some risk, but I'm assured that hernia surgery is relatively simple, often requiring no more than a simple and short recovery period before returning home. I also know that my age and my COPD do not render me an ideal candidate for general surgery, but I'm not going to let that worry me. What will happen, will happen. It''s beyond my control.

The one thing I'm certain of is your continued support and compassion. I would do the same for any of you, I hope you know that. For now, I'm out of here and I promise I'll take things easy and not worry.

As I said, I thank you all from my heart.

Hugs and love,
Catherine Linda Michel

Comments

Better than being in an emergency room though

... as I had to wait 5 hours, after arriving in emergency at at 5:00 pm ) before even getting triaged as I was reporting that I had bad abdominal pains, which I suspected was appendicitis. I had been experiencing wrenching abdominal pain for over 24 hours prior to finally admitting myself I had to go. I was a poor student at that time with no medical insurance.

FINALLY the doctor saw me and insisted it was a urinary tract infection(!) which I knew it wasn't and was about to send me home(!) This even after X-raying me.

I finally got into a room - a private one as I was also pre-op - and they put me on antibiotics which I think may have saved me as next day they spent time on ANOTHER X-ray and then an ultrasound which freaked out the girl technician as she saw no uterus or ovaries ( well, sorry to say I am to intersex TG fantasy ) and then a doctor took and had it done.

It wasn't until the evening of the following day that a surgeon came in and urgently told me that I had to have surgery NOW since I had appendicitis ( well duh ).

As it turned out it was THAT close to bursting but he did get it out in time.

The silver lining in all this is that I wound up not paying for the emergency room incompetence once they were told what had happened. Honestly they were lucky I did not sue.

Sigh, I don't trust a doctor to diagnose a papercut sometimes.

Point is of course bad experiences of diagnostic incompetence is not all that uncommon. Yours is painful but not life threatening per se luckily

Kim

And the really bad part of that

is that a very simple blood test of the white cell count will say sppendix over any other cause. Only takes moments to get the results of the white cells. When the wife was pregnant back in 75, they thought her appendix went bad. She was carrying triplets at the time, so there were many problems with the surgery. After they opened her, they found a perfectly good appendix. The strain of the three babies which they had to anehthesize along with her, on the uterus and muscles was the cause of the problems, along with pressdure on the other organs down there. The simple test would have shown that, and did, but only after the surgery. It is hard to trust a doctor.

Similar experience

Cathy
I know what you mean. I had appendicitus and was rushed to Long Beach Naval Hospital. As a training hospital I was the test subject of the day. Corpman do you know how to test for a hernia? No? Press over the right side and release quickly: if the patient doubles over in excrusiating pain then it is the appendix. Corpman...Repeat. Corpman...Repeat. Corpman... Repeat. Arghhhhh.

Huggles
Chelle_MM

I've known several...

that've had hernias "fixed"... And, having talked to my brother-in-law (a surgeon), hernia fix-ups are as close to "routine" as it gets in the surgery world. So, while it's not fun now (okay, a long way from fun), that bit is likely to be fixed relatively easily.

Based on passed experience though, even when they're working in the area, for some strange reason, they seem to want to get rid of those extra bits of worthless (okay worse than worthless) flesh. You may have a better chance on ONE of them though (from what you say) and I hope you're lucky enough for that!

Glad your worst fears came to naught! I know how medical scares can be... Being told (almost 2 years ago) that there was a spot on one of my lungs in a chest x-ray was NOT one of the happiest points I've experienced. The timing really sucked too!

Best wishes on a quick and effective surgery. May your next trip north on 219 (I assume that's the road you were on) be less traumatic.

Annette

Nope.

The NYS thruway. Rt 90.

As a T-woman, I do have a Y chromosome... it's just in cursive, pink script. Y_0.jpg