ChatterBank0 min ago
Hello Sqad
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Have you got a minute please?
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No best answer has yet been selected by sherrardk. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Thank you. Himself had a bleed on the brain and yesterday had coiling(?). He is apparently doing amazingly well and is out of ICU and bored on the ward. He will be there at least ten days. What changes (if any) will he need to make to his lifestyle when he comes home (because he may well be economical with the truth to avoid fussing)? He has no (current) ill effects apart from a banging bad head and has been told he has been 'really lucky'. He seems most impressed at the price of the thing that they put in his head. Thanks.
Well.......I have been following your posts.
Coiling is a fancy name for putting a clip around an aneurysm that has burst and caused a bleed in the subarachnoid space.
I don't know what the future has in store and neither does anyone else at this stage, but sherrard i can give you a few clues.
There may well be a slow recovery during which time he may well have difficulty in coping with day to day tasks and may find relationships with his wife or friends difficult.Short tempered, exasperated, tense or even bout of depression.His memory and concentration may also be impaired.
There is also a chance of a further bleed within the next week or so.
So, after really depressing you, the other side of the coin is that he will recover fully, with none of the above that i have described.
I will watch your threads with interest.
Coiling is a fancy name for putting a clip around an aneurysm that has burst and caused a bleed in the subarachnoid space.
I don't know what the future has in store and neither does anyone else at this stage, but sherrard i can give you a few clues.
There may well be a slow recovery during which time he may well have difficulty in coping with day to day tasks and may find relationships with his wife or friends difficult.Short tempered, exasperated, tense or even bout of depression.His memory and concentration may also be impaired.
There is also a chance of a further bleed within the next week or so.
So, after really depressing you, the other side of the coin is that he will recover fully, with none of the above that i have described.
I will watch your threads with interest.
Hi Sherrard - when you mentioned earlier your hubby had "bleed on the brain" - my immediate thought "aneurysm". My sister's friend - about 5 years ago - went to opticians for an eye test and they found the "aneurysm" - was immediately operated on.
She is as cheeky as ever. She is brilliant. Maybe a little comfort - about 5 years ago now.
She is as cheeky as ever. She is brilliant. Maybe a little comfort - about 5 years ago now.
Thanks all, will feel better when we see him tomorrow. Couldn't go today (children and ICU probably don't mix) and didn't know when he would be fit to see anyone yesterday. He has had company today (his friend drove down from Carlisle to see him and is staying over tonight to go and see him tomorrow). People have been so kind, very lucky to have such nice friends.
I'm sure he will be fine Sher, as I said before on another thread my Mum suffered an aneurysm, at the age of 73, then had another one 10 days later while she was in the hospital. They didn't do the coiling op (never quite found out why) she was in ITU on life support for 10 days, completely out of it and we were told on numerous occasions to expect the worst as they couldn't stabilise her. She had pneumonia then C Diff, so it was really bad, she was in hospital for nearly 3 months, she had to lie flat for weeks on end so eventually had to learn to walk again BUT she survived :) and miraculously she suffered no after effects at all - no mood swings, speech or mobility problems. She was a little dizzy for 2 days when returning home but the doctor said that could have been the excitement at coming home. She is now nearly 90 still independent in her own home ...... so please don't worry Sher - think positive - sure he will be back to his old self soon :)
My 40yr old friend is just 2 weeks ahead of Mr Sher. he's home and doing well but experiencing headaches. He has to keep a headache diary but every day they are reducing. Because of this he's not coping well with noise, but he was used to a very quiet house and visitors mustn't stay too long. Mr Sher on the otherhand will be used to having more people around him but may need more time than usual to rest in a quiet room.
Energy levels are very low and he's not allowed to drive for several weeks yet, but he looks well and is very much his old grumpy self!
Wishing Mr Sher a speedy recovery and home to you all soon.
Energy levels are very low and he's not allowed to drive for several weeks yet, but he looks well and is very much his old grumpy self!
Wishing Mr Sher a speedy recovery and home to you all soon.
It sounds as if your husband has had endovascular coiling - the is usually done by an interventional neuroradiologist (sometimes a neurosurgeon) who passes a catheter up the femoral artery to the brain and puts a platinum coil into the aneurysm to seal it off.
Patients who have this done recover more quickly and have better results than conventional open surgery and clipping.
I hope he continues to do well.
Patients who have this done recover more quickly and have better results than conventional open surgery and clipping.
I hope he continues to do well.