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Can you take care of yourself after anal fistula surgery
If you have strong willpower, you can do it. If it really doesn't work, you can take care of yourself with others on the first day of surgery.

I had an operation on May Day. After the operation in the morning, the nurse pushed the nurse to the door of the ward and lay on the bed. Then the nurse pressed a sandbag under her ass, saying it was hemostasis, and then gave her a hemostatic needle and infusion. Two hours later, I urinated for the first time, which was very painful. I carried a saline bag on my back (if I am alone, I can put a small hook on the wall above the toilet), and I didn't pee in the toilet for more than half an hour. The doctor told me to turn on the faucet of the toilet and listen to the sound of water before urinating. Then I went back to bed to continue infusion and lost three bottles. During this period, I drank some porridge, and the incision was always very painful in the afternoon and evening. I felt very high because I was stuffed with gauze. I also had porridge in the evening, and the meal was ordered in the hospital. Someone sent it with a dollar, but I didn't sleep well that night.

The next morning, the doctor checked the ward and went to change the medicine. It's painful to walk only a little, but it's much easier to change the dressing. I don't go up when I take gauze. It hurts to walk, and it hurts to move in bed. When changing the dressing, I waited in bed for the nurse to come over for infusion. I always lose fluid 6 days after surgery (usually 6 days). You can eat normally the next day.

Get up at 6 o'clock the next morning and start to go to the toilet. It hurts very much, and it's still bleeding. After going to the toilet, I began to soak PP 15 minutes, then washed it with water, put sanitary napkins on my underwear and put on my pants. Lying in bed, waiting for the dressing change.

Basically every day. . .

/kloc-after 0/0 days, basically it hurts to walk, but it doesn't hurt too much, and it doesn't hurt or bleed when going to the toilet. . .

Half a month later, the doctor said he could leave the hospital, and he was discharged.