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Hi Dan

Thank you for your very detailed posting.

I get my second hip resurfaced next Thursday, and your diary helped

to prompt what I might hope for.

One question: how did you find the drive to your sisters? I will be

being driven from Birmingham to Hampshire?

I hope your recovery continues to go so well.

ine

>

> Dear Surfacehippies

>

> This may turn out to be a long message/post, so I'll divide it into

various headings. I’ll be posting snapshots as well †" check the

Photos link on the left side of the surfacehippy home page.

>

> Facts

>

> I had my left hip resurfaced on Monday, 16th February 2004, at St.

Cross Hospital in Rugby, Warwickshire, United Kingdom. The operation

was performed by Mr. Krikler. The procedure was done on the

NHS (National Health Service), or free of charge.

>

> Chronology

>

> Sunday, 15/02/04 Checked in St. Cross's Cedar Ward; met

Harry who is also a 53-year old with a left hip due for resurfacing

by Mr Krikler; Harry is very fit) I carry some 8 pounds of excess

weight round my waist)

>

> Monday, 16/02/04 Agreed with anaesthetist to have spinal

anaesthetic (like epidural for women in birth); Mr Krikler was happy

to provide a " running commentary "

>

> At approx. 12:00 taken to pre-op theatre room where spinal was

applied

>

> Apparently was taken to op theatre where Mr Krikler started the

incision and I mentioned that I could feel it - he asked the

anaesthetist to apply general anaesthetic. I do not recall this

exchange. I understand that the op lasted 1 hour and 45 min. Mr

Krikler said that the hip was very stiff and that I had very hard

bones. It appears a bit more work than usual. He fitted a Cormet

device with a 48mm cup on femoral head.

>

> At about 16:30 I was awake and back at the Cedar ward.

>

> A couple of hours later Mr Krikler saw Harry and me (Harry was

operated after I was and his op lasted 1.15, I understand). By then

the small of my back was quite uncomfortable and I asked Mr Krikler

if it would be OK to turn on my 'good' side (non-operated right). He

said that'd be OK (many nurses were later surprised by this - I guess

they are still more familiar with the THR post-operative procedure

which prohibits sleeping on your side, or crossing legs, for months,

I understand)

>

> Spent the night mostly awake; did not use PCA (Patient Controlled

Analgesia) - morphine pump to you and I - as the discomfort was

bearable (I have to stress here that I was not playing macho, but

that I have extremely high pain threshold and went through years of

OA with bone-on-bone and a cyst without ever taking a single pain

killer); passed water 4 times (nearly a pint each time?!?) and sat-up

on the bed to wee (I could never do it using the 'goose' bottle lying

down in bed); constant sitting-up and fidgeting led to some leakage

and oozing from the incision which got redressed 3 times that night;

all-in-all not too bad a night.

>

>

> Tuesday, 17/02/04 Day 1 - is how the hospital staff refer

to the day after the op; given a 'Zimmer walking frame at about 08:00

(after breakfast) and told to apply full weight bearing on the

operated leg/hip

>

> Walked round the Ward and to the main corridor all the way to the

lifts where use of mobile phones is permitted; phoned friends and

loved ones to inform them that all's OK; couldn't find a place to

connect my laptop (rather found a connector but the hospital

switchboard could not enable it for external calls to an ISP -

however, this week a new cable system went live there and each bed

will have cable TV, telephony [outgoing only, I understand] and full

internet access); alternated the day between walking, laying in bed

reading an obscure book and talking to Harry and the other 4 patients

in our room; had bowel movement and used toilet.

>

>

> Wednesday, 18/02/04 Day 2 - had a shower in the bathroom; no

problem washing both legs; could see bits of bruising on my bottom;

very little swelling.

>

> Told that I have a 9-10 " incision/scar (22.5 - 25 cm); not bothered

by that; it is healing beautifully.

>

> Harry and I are given 2 walking sticks/canes each cut to our size;

we start walking with these; usual destination: outside the lifts in

the main corridor; spending a fortune on mobile calls; after an hour

I drop one stick/cane and use one only (I'd like to stress here -

mainly for our Yankee friends - that one is free to walk round and

explore as we do not have the culture of suing the hospital should we

stumble, fall and injure ourselves; it is pretty much left to the

patient to be sensible; I always informed the duty nurse when I went

for a walk, especially at night when I couldn't sleep; but I

appreciated the unrestricted, yet caring, environment I was in).

>

> The continuous walking, interspersed with periods of

rest/sleep/reading appear to have speeded-up the healing

tremendously - both the bruising and the swelling are fast

disappearing.

>

> Made a mistake of not asking for a sleeping pill and spent most of

the night awake but without any pain.

>

>

> Thursday, 19/02/04 Day 3 - Physiotherapist gives us (Harry

and I) the steps (up and down) and the platform test (up and down)

with one cane/stick - we pass and are ready to go home.

>

> Blood test shows our INR (International Normalcy Ratio) for blood

coagulation is too low at 1.2 and 1.4 respectively for myself and

Harry; the hospital decides not to release us until we reach the

accepted INR window of 1.5 - 2.5 (apparently, if our blood coagulates

faster that 1.5 times the blood of a normal person, i.e. the range

between 1.0 and 1.49, we are at risk of DVT of sorts where a

thrombocite can get lodged in our lungs causing sometimes deadly

pulmonary thrombosis; if, however, our blood coagulates slower than

2.5 times that of a non-operated person who moved round normally, we

are at risk of suffering bleed which could be very difficult to stop

and even fatal if internal and unobserved); at St. Cross's hospital,

or maybe even at that Health Trust, the DVT is dealt with using

Warfarin tablets (also known as rat poison as that what it is

commonly used for).

>

> Mr Krikler visits us and I take snapshots - I hope I'll be able to

post these.

>

> Nicola, the occupational therapist, is moving heaven and earth to

arrange all the necessary equipment for me when I'm released - there

are peculiar problems as I am way out of my area (I live in North

East London, some 120 miles south-east of Rugby), and I shall be

staying at my sister's place in Essex, another 50 miles east from my

home. Nicola is trying to arrange through the local social services

for raised toilet seat, bed mats, raised chairs, bath boards (to

enter a bath tub safely), grabbers, long shoehorns etc. to be

provided by one Health Trust, via another one where I live in the

third one where I'll be staying - ah the vagaries of bureaucracy.

>

>

> Friday, 20/02/04 Day 4 - failed the test again;

Warfarin dosage upped to max.

>

>

> Saturday, 21/02/04 Day 5 - failed again; only managed to

get the ratio to 1.49; Harry is allowed to go home for the night as

he lives only 7 miles away.

>

> I continue my 15 min walks round hospital complex/park at least

twice daily without a cane or stick which I carry in my arms but do

not use. I regret not bringing my car to the hospital - I could have

driven it already on Day 3 as it is an automatic and given that in

the UK the steering column is on the right and I had my left hip

operated, I could have driven my car without any problems for, say, 3

hours.

>

>

> Sunday, 22/02/04 Day 6 - finally passed my INR test

(barely, with 1.51); in the afternoon my daughter and her boyfriend

gave me a lift back to my sister's place.

>

>

> 22/03/04 - 29/02/04 Daily - walks approx. 1 mile without any

aides.

>

> Bruising has nearly all disappeared; there's no swelling; once a

day, usually before going to bed, I take 2 Paracetamol tablets and 1

Ibuprofen tablet - these are meant to be pain killers and anti-

inflammatory in their actions; the latter I welcome, the former I do

not need, but I do want to be a 'good patient'

>

> I can do most things without a major inconvenience - dressing and

undressing; using the toilet; walking; using the stairs; putting

on/off left sock & shoe; washing/drying left foot etc.

>

>

> 01/03/04 †" 06/03/06 Moved back home; I’m using my bath

shower now; I no longer wear a dressing/plaster over the scar (Mr

Krikler used subcutaneous self-dissolving stitches †" the 9-10â€

incision has fully healed).

>

> I’ve been driving my car for the last 6 days †" no problems in

driving it, getting in/out, etc.

>

> Went to Central London †" the usual Friday lunchtime drinks with

pals †" I went there unaided (no walking stick/cane) using public

transport (bus and London Underground, or Tube as we call it).

Again, no problems using any of these means of transport.

>

> Comments

> Leg length

>

> Mr Krikler explained the mechanics of the procedure in detail; my

leg was 1.5 cm shorter; once the bio-physics of the pelvis-to-foot is

clear and the resurfacing procedure is factored in, it is clear to me

why the resurfacing procedure can do very little regarding leg length

(mine looks OK now, but I'll have to wait until my gait and posture

are corrected and straight before I can establish if there'll be a

discrepancy) while THR can be much more effective in mitigating leg

length. That's about the only advantage that I could see that THR

may have over resurfacing.

>

> Mobility

>

> Extremely high extremely early - I'm absolutely impressed.

>

> Recovery / rehabilitation

>

> Unbelievably fast and painless (for me at least). However, I

realise now that the operation is less than 50% of the solution - the

larger part is recovery/rehabilitation.

>

> ROM

>

> Could not have imagined that the range of movement would be

restored to such a high level so quickly. I said, probably too

optimistically, to Mr Krikler that I plan to come for a 6-week check-

up on my Honda Hornet to Rugby (ha thought I was mad and he is a

biker too).

>

> My final challenge †" to tie the shoelace on my left foot/shoe. I

hope I’ll be able to do that in a few weeks time. Standing on my

operated leg, with my good leg in the air (crane-like position), I

not a problem but I lack the balance I have when I stand on my

‘good’ leg.

>

> Blood coagulation risks & management

>

> Probably the least impressive of the otherwise superb NHS (or, at

least that particular Health Trust). Two of us were kept in valuable

beds for 3 days - the only thing that happened throughout these 3

days was the dispensing of the correct dosage of Warfarin in the

evening and a subsequent INR test in the morning. I'm certain that

could have been done in the local surgery / health centre where the

patient is based.

> Thanks & appreciation

> Where do I start? Mr Krikler for his wonderful manner and style

with patients. He answered every question without ambiguity, without

use of a patronising tone, with the patience that professionals have

to have when they're dealing with a layman. The fact that he was

nearly invisible and that he made himself appear accidental in this

process, helped reassure me, and I suppose other patients of his,

that this is a routine op. By the way, Mr Krikler has performed 330+

resurfacings using Cormet in the last 8+ years. If you ask him,

he'll tell you openly about the 3-4 cases that needed revisions and

why. He does also perform this procedure privately - I understand

that the package costs £9,000.00 (US$16,200.00 at 1.8 exchange rate)

all inclusive (of course, there's the added travel costs for our USA

friends). Considering that the Cormet device costs some £2,000.00,

I believe this is very good value for money. Admittedly, it is

slightly more expensive than DeSmet in Ghent, Belgium, but we might

be splitting hairs here.

>

> I must mention Safi, a Ward Nurse who appears to be quietly running

the show. She is a perfect example of a person who gains respect

through her actions and deeds. Her dedication, application,

thoroughness, devotion and professionalism were a sight to watch.

Luckily, she was given a student nurse to teach as well - the student

was in perfect hands and would learn the profession well by being

tutored by Safi.

>

> Nicola, who joined this site and offered to help with advice, is

one of these people for whom no problem is unsolvable. One felt safe

if she said she would look into something. I can't thank her enough.

>

> There were numerous staff that were ever so eager to help - I'll

mention Ivan (from Zimbabwe, if I remember correctly) and Riki (from

Zambia, I believe). These guys were there throughout the long night

shift and would respond immediately if you pressed the buzzer - you

could have tea at any time of day or night. Whatever you needed, they

provided it.

>

> Lastly, it would be unfair if I did not mention and thank all the

other staff at St Cross hospital. This is a nice hospital with

diligent and conscientious staff that look well after their

patients. Even the food was nice.

>

> I must finish by mentioning the NHS - this is for the Brits - and

stress that anybody who wants to abolish it or plans to privatise it

is either insane or deliberately criminal. We have institutions for

both types. And for the unfortunate Yanks who have to fork out

personal cash for the op - consider strongly Mr Krikler and St Cross

in Rugby (although Mr Krikler may suggest another hospital where he

operates also).

>

> I'll shut up now. I hope to have more good news in 4 weeks time

when I'm due to see Mr Krikler for a check-up.

> 3 +44 (0)7974 981-407

> * +44 (0)20 8501-2573

> @ dan.milosevic@i...

> * 1A Cypress Grove

> Hainault

> ILFORD

> Essex

> IG6 3AT

> United Kingdom

>

>

>

>

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