After - in hospital
You will have a drip to give you fluids while you are not allowed to drink. This is a plastic tube attached to either your arm or neck. The doctors listen to your bowel through your tummy with a stethoscope. When they can hear sounds from your bowel or you have passed wind they start to give you oral fluids. This can take a few days. This is gradually increased until you are able to drink as much as you want.
Once you are drinking normally the drip will come out and you will be able to eat a light diet.
- you will have a dressing on your wound and a drainage tube nearby, connected to a plastic bag. This is to drain any blood left from the operation
- the wounds are painful for several days. You will be given painkillers to control this
- you will probably have a fine rubber tube (catheter) going into your bladder to drain the urine. This will be taken out when you are able to get out of bed easily
- the stoma may not work immediately. It is always runny.
- the nurses will help you with everything you need until you are able to do things for yourself
- you will get special advice and help from the stoma nurses
You should be eating and drinking normally after about four to six days.
The wound has a dressing which may show some staining with old blood in the first 24 hours. There may be stitches or clips in the skin. Stitches and clips are removed after about 7 to 10 days. The drain tube is removed after about 2-4 days.
There may be some purple bruising around the wound. This spreads downwards and will fade to a yellow colour after 2 to 3 days. It is not important.
There may be some swelling of the surrounding skin, which also improves in 2 to 3 days.
You can wash as soon as the dressing has been removed.
You will be given an appointment for a check up at the outpatient department about six to eight weeks after you leave hospital.
The nurses will tell you about things like sick notes and certificates.
The stoma nurse will keep in contact with you at home.
After a general anaesthetic
The anaesthetic drugs will make you sleepy, slow, clumsy and forgetful for about 24 hours. Do not make important decisions during this time.
After - at home
You are likely to feel very tired and need rests two or three times a day for a month or more. You will gradually improve so that after three months you will be able to return to your usual level of activity.
You can drive as soon as you can make an emergency stop without discomfort in the wound. This should be after about six to eight weeks.
You can restart sexual relations within three to four weeks when the wound is comfortable enough. There may be some damage to the sex nerves after the operation. The surgeon will talk to you about this.
You should be able to return to a light job within eight weeks and a heavy job within 12 weeks.
After keyhole surgery the recovery time is much quicker than with the open method of surgery but caution should still be paid to heavy lifting and driving