Out of recovery and into the ICUby Jim

Wed
21 May 2008
3:05 pm
0

I just got back from visiting Angie in the ICU.  I can’t use WiFi in there, so I have to post out in the visitor waiting area.  Angie is in good spirits and seems to be just fine.  Everyone has told us the procedure went very well.  Dr. Jackson (Angie’s anesthesiologist), said it went “perfectly, beautifully, better than I could have imagined”.  And currently, she’s got “the best nurse” (according to the nurse next door).

The visiting hours are a little strange.  I guess you can visit on the even hours for 30 minutes without checking into the front desk.  I asked the nurse, Kim, and she said it should be quiet back in Angie’s room and that she is fine if I hang around.  I don’t know if I can stay the night in the ICU, like I could at Primary Children’s.

Well, I’m going to grab a bite to eat and head back to the ICU.

Update from the Surgeonby Jim

Wed
21 May 2008
12:05 pm
4

Angie’s surgeon (Dr. Jacobsen, I think) just finished talking to me. She said everything went fine. They didn’t start until about 10, so that is why I haven’t heard anything until now. The surgery was successful. When they first made the incision, there was some fluid they were concerned about, so they’ve sent it off to be tested. One of the cysts did have a rupture, so it is likely that the fluid is just from that, so they aren’t too worried.

She’s got her epidural in and it will probably stay in for the next few days. The doctor said typically patients have the epidural in for 3 days, 4 at the most. They’ll be moving her to the ICU in the next couple hours. (Right now she is in Recovery.) There isn’t anything wrong, they just want to send her to the ICU so that she has a nurse assigned to just her. They told us this plan before we even started. They would have sent her straight to the ICU, but (as usual) they are waiting for a bed to open up. I won’t be able to see Angie until she moves to the ICU.

So, it looks like we’ll be here for a few days. I plan on going back to work so I don’t burn up all my sick leave, but I’ll stay with Angie as much as I can. My parents are (conveniently) in town, so my mom will be helping out with the vigil.

The surgery is doneby Jim

Wed
21 May 2008
11:05 am
0

I was just told that the surgery is done and Angie should be going to the ICU any time now. In the meantime, I’ve installed a new plugin so that users just like you can get email notifications when I post new updates on the blog.

If any of you are interested,

  • Find the Meta section on the side bar (it should be at the bottom) and select “Register”.
  • Sign up for an account with a username and valid password. You’ll be sent a randomly generated password to your inbox.
  • Check your email, copy the password to your clipboard, come back to the site and log in.
  • Next, you will be prompted to set up your profile.
  • When you are logged in, you will see a section at the top called “Subscriptions”. If you don’t see it, try clicking on “Site Admin” under Meta and then click on “Profile”. Click “Subscriptions” and then select the categories you’d like to receive updates for.

I will be using the “Hospital Update” category for the up-to-the-minute updates while we’re here in the hospital, so if that is all you would like to be notified about, click the checkbox and hit update. Feel free to subscribe to any of the other categories.

If you’d rather not create an account and all, just use the Email Subscription box on the side.  The advantage is you don’t have to create an account.  The disadvantage, you can’t select any category for what notices you get, you just get them all.  In all honesty, there won’t be anything besides hospital updates for the next few days, so that’d be fine.  You can always unsubscribe when everything is done (but then you wouldn’t get an email for any future hospitalizations, etc.).

Also, just FYI, I think you can leave a comment without it being moderated if you sign up for an account.

So what are you waiting for?  Sign up already!

Enjoy!

Time for another surgeryby Jim

Wed
21 May 2008
9:05 am
3

I’m here at Stanford hospital waiting for Angie’s surgery to be finished. They wanted us here at 5:30 this morning, and it is an hour drive to get here (to the minute according to the GPS), so we had to wake up super early. We arrived only a few minutes late. There wasn’t traffic, but I was still surprised how many cars were on the road.

Checking in went fine and they let me go back with her until she left for the O.R.. They actually moved her surgery to the cardiac O.R. so they could take all the time they wanted. They’ve got the room booked the entire day. She was scheduled for 7:30 in the regular O.R., but they wanted to have plenty of time to do pacemaker stuff and whatnot. Unfortunately, that means I don’t know when it will be done (or when it started for that matter). I assume by now they’ve already begun.

We were told they hope the procedure will take no more than 2 hours. They are going to do some exploration first to see what is going on and then based on that, they’ll remove the cyst(s). Anything else that has to go will also be removed at their discretion. Angie’s got her iPod with her and a CD of meditation and relaxing music prescribed to her for the surgery. I guess they’re doing this new thing for patients to help them relax. She’s not being put to sleep, so hopefully the recovery will go faster. She’ll be pretty happy with all the drugs they’ll give her, so she should be just fine.

As this is our first time at an “adult” hospital, we were a little apprehensive about our experience. So far, I’ve been really impressed with the professionalism and the sensitivity of the doctors, nurses, and staff here. I was worried the service would be really good, but that they wouldn’t care as much about feelings and emotions and the other parts of healing that Primary Children’s is so good at. Well, this is a world-class hospital for good reason, it seems.

I will keep you posted as the day goes on, so keep checking in!

(Leave comments on this and subsequent posts for Angie to read.)

May the 4thby Jim

Sun
4 May 2008
7:05 pm
1

I just wanted to take this opportunity to say, “May the Fourth be with you.”

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I’m Famous!by Jim

Sat
19 Apr 2008
5:04 pm
1

Well, maybe not famous, but the laser I’m working on is.  KQED did a little blurb on NIF recently, so I’ve posted it here.  It gives a good summary of what we’re working on out here in Livermore, and it is worth watching.  I think it is cool, but then I’m partial to videos about giant lasers.  (The segment is about 11 minutes long.)

If you’d like to watch a bigger version of it, pop on over to http://www.kqed.org and have a look-see.  Man, I love my job.

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Do-it-yourself Car Repairby Jim

Sun
30 Mar 2008
10:03 am
0

I’ve never done much in the way of fixing cars, but I’ve been interested in it for a few years now. Meaning that I’d really like to learn how to do some simple stuff to save me a few bucks. Besides, I think it is fun to take things apart and fix things up.

Spark PlugThis last month, with the encouragement of my friend and co-worker, Justin Bradley, I actually worked on my car in two different instances! I bought new speakers for our trip down to L.A. to see the Young Ambassadors and I changed my own spark plugs. It was a lot of fun. While we had the doors off to replace the speakers, we also fixed the locking mechanism for the passenger side door, which has been broken for some time. It felt really good to do something myself that would have cost me over a hundred dollars if I had brought it to a mechanic.

In order to get to the locking mechanism in the door, we had to peel back some plastic, which had been glued to the frame with some really nasty stuff. It looked like Venom from Spiderman 3 got stuck inside my door.  (Click for a larger view.)

Door Glue (small)

Here is a picture of the old speaker next to the new:

Old Speaker vs. New (small)

And yes, the new speakers sound loads better; the old ones had started buzzing, which was getting really annoying. I don’t know why I didn’t replace them earlier.

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