by debih » 17 Jan 2013, 20:53
Yes - sorry didn't get chance to get on earlier with all the running around for army cadets, etc.
I spoke to the vet who operated this afternoon and she said it went well. When she first put the camera down she could really see the difference from the first op but she still inflated again. Millie cane round well and one of the nurses rang me at about 6pm to say that she had kept some liquid food down and that she is going to try her with some more later and then they will try her on tinned food tomorrow. The vet is hopeful that, weather permitting, she can come home Friday night or Saturday morning.
The vet said that she will always have the stricture and that it may close up again - we will know that it has if she starts to regurgitate. They can operate again in the same way if it does happen. It would only really affect her quality of life if it kept happening a lot and she kept having to have the op all the time.
The nurse said that the feeding regime will be hard - she is being fed pretty much at head height at the moment, very small meals and when she goes onto tinned food it might need rollling into balls and feeding by hand. Then they are holding her head up for 5 minutes after feeding. They will show us what they want us to do when we collect her. It won't be a major problem for me to feed her during the day on my work days - I am only 5 minutes away by car - the problem will only be if the snow hangs around and it isn't as easy to get home but I know that I can ask neighbour to pop in to do it. I don't know if this is a short term thing or a life long thing. We will find out more when we speak to the dietician and nurses.
Just keeping fingers crossed that she keeps the food down tomorrow - but everyone is really positive. She has lost more weight and is now around 12kg (she was 17.5kg when weighed after the accident) so she will take some building up.
And then fingers crossed that the road doesn't get completely blocked so that we can get her home.
Life begins at the end of your comfort zone!