Posted: Sat Oct 27, 2007 8:09 am
Here is the other side of the story.
I was diagnosed with a deviated septum in 1990. I was having daily migraines that my GP sent me to a neurologist to try to see if they could get them under control as she wasn't having any luck.
I went to a large teaching hospital and after reviewing my case and doing the work up on me decided to have an ENT take a look at me. The ENT did some testing and found out I have severe allergies (I was told I was a 12 on a scale of 1 to 10) and a severly deviated septum. I thought everyone breathed through one side of their nose -- .
It was recommended that I have my septum repaired and my sinuses worked on. I agreed to the surgery.
I had my surgery on a Wednesday. It was suppose to be routine out patient surgery and I would return home that afternoon. I was told by my husband it seemed to take forever and of course I have no memory of it. I DO remember waking up and could NOT breathe!! I was packed tight with gauze and couldn't breathe through my nose at all!! That meant I had to mouth breathe. I felt like I was suffocating, but that wasn't the bad part. The bad part was the constant dripping of blood down my throat and although I have a high tolerance for pain -- THIS HURT!!
I do know that this simple out patient surgery WASN"T a simple out patient surgery for me as the doctor would NOT let me come home and I ended up being admitted to the hospital for approximately 4 days. Even after I returned home I had a lot of drainage and seepage that was awful. I remember taking the pain meds on a fairly regular basis (I have had surgery in the past and have NOT needed the pain meds much).
It also made the daily migraines worse.
The ENT that did the surgery was the chief of staff of the ENT department and I checked his references prior to the surgery and he was supposed to be the best in the state. I don't feel that it was due to a botched job -- just unsure what happened.
The ENT put me in a long term study and I was tracked over a few years and they did routine scopes of my nose and sinuses (every three to six months). When asked if I would have the surgery repeated -- I told them no.
It was the worst thing I have ever undergone. I have had three other major surgeries and they do not compare to the deviated septum one.
When asked if I would do it again -- I WOULD NOT go through that if I had a choice to redo it.
I was diagnosed with a deviated septum in 1990. I was having daily migraines that my GP sent me to a neurologist to try to see if they could get them under control as she wasn't having any luck.
I went to a large teaching hospital and after reviewing my case and doing the work up on me decided to have an ENT take a look at me. The ENT did some testing and found out I have severe allergies (I was told I was a 12 on a scale of 1 to 10) and a severly deviated septum. I thought everyone breathed through one side of their nose -- .
It was recommended that I have my septum repaired and my sinuses worked on. I agreed to the surgery.
I had my surgery on a Wednesday. It was suppose to be routine out patient surgery and I would return home that afternoon. I was told by my husband it seemed to take forever and of course I have no memory of it. I DO remember waking up and could NOT breathe!! I was packed tight with gauze and couldn't breathe through my nose at all!! That meant I had to mouth breathe. I felt like I was suffocating, but that wasn't the bad part. The bad part was the constant dripping of blood down my throat and although I have a high tolerance for pain -- THIS HURT!!
I do know that this simple out patient surgery WASN"T a simple out patient surgery for me as the doctor would NOT let me come home and I ended up being admitted to the hospital for approximately 4 days. Even after I returned home I had a lot of drainage and seepage that was awful. I remember taking the pain meds on a fairly regular basis (I have had surgery in the past and have NOT needed the pain meds much).
It also made the daily migraines worse.
The ENT that did the surgery was the chief of staff of the ENT department and I checked his references prior to the surgery and he was supposed to be the best in the state. I don't feel that it was due to a botched job -- just unsure what happened.
The ENT put me in a long term study and I was tracked over a few years and they did routine scopes of my nose and sinuses (every three to six months). When asked if I would have the surgery repeated -- I told them no.
It was the worst thing I have ever undergone. I have had three other major surgeries and they do not compare to the deviated septum one.
When asked if I would do it again -- I WOULD NOT go through that if I had a choice to redo it.