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CORONARY BYPASS SURGERY: DOUBT AND INSECURITY
While you are in hospital, doctors and other team members will explain to you what has happened. They will discuss coronary heart disease and its causes with you and you will learn about the processes of mobilization and physiotherapy. However, when you are in hospital recovering from a big operation, it may be difficult to take in all this information. Your mind is probably on other things. You may be anxious and insecure about your recovery, about possible disability, about the operation failing or heart problems recurring, about what the future may or may not hold. We all know that death associated with surgery is always a possibility, no matter how remote. Even if you have been told that only one patient in 100 dies, you may worry that you could be that one.
The possibility of unsuccessful surgery
We know that the operation may occasionally fail. This may be because the grafts or the coronary arteries themselves are unsuitable for the operation to be successful. Your surgeon can only find this out once the chest is opened and the vessels are inspected. It is also reasonable to think that something may go wrong during the operation. A patient could suffer from a heart attack while undergoing surgery but this is very rare. In some cases, the operation is successful in relieving angina but leaves you partly disabled by shortness of breath or some other problem.
Although these chances are small, it is not unreasonable to think about the possibility that you may not be able to work in future, or support yourself or your family, or lead a normal life. Indeed, it would be a strange person who does not have such thoughts. These thoughts may linger and concern you for some time after the operation, until your recovery is complete.
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