Post op exhaustion
Posted , 12 users are following.
Hi, I am seven week post op. Very healthy, active person, with normal knee recovery. However I am continually suffering from exhaustion. I am tired by the time I am dressed in the morning. I am normally very active, able to do housework, gardening etc. Is this normal after so long
0 likes, 21 replies
eileen15268 jan77947
Posted
Hi Jan. That's how I felt a couple weeks after surgery I'm nearly 6 weeks post now. I saw the doctor & she gave me blood tests , a couple days later she rang to say the result was that I was anaemic, & could have lost too much blood during surgery& never really made it up as I didn't eat much whilst in hospital due to feeling nauseous, my blood count was fine before. So she gave me Ferrious Fumerate a kind of Iron tablets & I picked up fairly quickly & fine now. Hope you can sort it out. The pain is bad enough without anything else to struggle with x
jan77947 eileen15268
Posted
eileen15268 jan77947
Posted
I guess that's good that your blood count is ok. I think that we lose so much sleep at nights & the intense pain is draining the body takes its toll. Hope that soon you will feel better x
chris02353 jan77947
Posted
Hi Jan. I was 7 weeks last Friday, I too am exhausted, find it hard some days to get motivated. I try to make myself go somewhere in order to get up dressed for. I saw specialist yesterday and he said I would be exhausted as its a major trauma to your system and everyone is different. I'm sure we will get there good luck.
jan77947 chris02353
Posted
robin66848 jan77947
Posted
cheryl90571 jan77947
Posted
Seven weeks is STILL healing time! Our bodies go through SO MUCH TRAUMA with these surgeries!
Move around every hour. Increase your time slowly. When you are tired--REST!
I began to notice increased stamina after about 12 weeks which coincided with FINALLY getting four or five hours of straight sleep at night.
Listen to your body. It will tell you what it needs. Drink plenty of water, and eat good foods. Take naps when you can. There is no shame in treating yourself well as you recover!
TKRs June and October 2015
jan77947 cheryl90571
Posted
Thanks Cheryl. It's good to know that other patients experience the same problems. I too am due my second TKR at the beginning of April so am desperate to feel well
eileen15268 cheryl90571
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Phew 12 weeks seems forever Cheryl do you get help with cooking meals? I am my husband s cater so I do have to get up & go even if I feel tired. Eileen
cheryl90571 jan77947
Posted
Having TWO good knees is WONDERFUL!
You will love it!♥️
cheryl90571 eileen15268
Posted
Two days after my second surgery I was discharged, had to walk using my walker all the way around my yard to our back deck because we had just had our front walkway and driveway poured (wet cement!). Everyone cooked and set up for our son's birthday, so all I had to do was SIT and EAT and ENJOY the party.
That was my "vacation", and the next day I went back to cooking, doing laundry, etc. with "breaks" of elevating, icing, and NAPPING!
I now had TWO replaced knees, and honestly, after suffering tremendous pain in both knees prior to my two surgeries, I felt SO MUCH BETTER than I HAD felt for many, many years! Outside of the pesky swelling and dealing with the heaviness and awkward feeling of learning how to walk all over again CORRECTLY, I really felt pretty good. I rested when I needed to, napped when sleep came ( yes!!!), and just soldiered on ---thrilled to be done with the terrible pain I was USED to having.
Getting both bad knees FIXED has changed my life. I hope you will see much success each day!😊
Guest jan77947
Posted
Yes Jan, all normal and improves w sleep. Thats why I've ended up calling this surgery a mind game. All the pain is one thing, and our individual bodys go through a time frame no matter how "ready" we think we are, BUT mentally we struggle with "will i ever get back to normal?" Because it takes SO freaking LONG. Most of us who are active get a little more impatient and have higher expectations of faster healing. The better shape were in it helps, but its still A PROCESS,that we just cant hurry.
Best thing has been this forum! It reminds us we're not crazy, we have encouragement in each other and for me, mentally, that helped me be more patient and not so hard on myself and my expectations. Despite my flex and straight, still working on strength and endurance.
Keep up the good work.
elaine94716 jan77947
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CHICO_MARX jan77947
Posted
Had the same problem early on like you (and 7 weeks is still early on...). Asked my doc why I was tired and sleeping all the time. She said that all the energy in my body was being directed to healing my knee. I was to eat healthy, hydrate and sleep as much as my body demanded. It does go away over time...especially after you finish PT and have to start your gym work. You're just fine...
marilyn10235 jan77947
Posted
Hi Jan
It's to be expected I'm afraid!
You've had a major operation, a brutal operation! Your body needs to recover from that as much as anything else.
Rest whenever you can, sleep or nap when you feel you need it.
This is an endurance recovery! So I'm afraid you have to endure it!
It does get better, you will find that gradually you are doing more & napping less. It doesn't happen over night but creeps up on you, you just realise that you haven't been as tired as you were & can do more.
For now just go with the flow.
I am at 4.5 months now & do not sleep in the afternoon any more.
All the best
Marilyn
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jan77947 marilyn10235
Posted
Thank you so much for the advice. My brain is telling me to accept the situation, however I know I am impatient.
I do feel so much better after joining this forum, and realising that everyone has the same symptoms as me.
Thanks again
Jan
marilyn10235 jan77947
Posted
Hi Jan,
Yes I was sooo glad to find this forum. The people on here are all ace.
Good advice & a dash of humour, for good measure.
Marilyn
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