Recovery Guide

Practical guidance for home recovery after emergency laparoscopy, open surgery, and colonic repair

ⓘ Please note: This guide is for general information only. Always follow your surgical team's specific instructions. If in doubt, call your hospital.

Background

  • Emergency laparoscopy converted to open surgery for gastric volvulus
  • Excision of BP limb of gastric bypass
  • Return to theatre for transverse colon defect repair
  • ICU stay
  • Now home, convalescing

1. Infection Watch — Priority #1

✓ Tip: Take a photo of each wound daily at the same time. This gives you (and your team) a clear record of any changes.

2. Nutrition

Eating pattern

Supplements — discuss with your surgical team first

All supplements should be discussed with the surgical team — not self-prescribed.

Hydration

✓ Bone broth is genuinely useful here — rich in collagen and amino acids, easy to absorb, and gentle on a healing gut.

3. Bowel Recovery

4. Pain Management

5. Sleep & Rest

6. Movement

✓ Deep breathing: 10 slow, deep breaths, 3–4 times daily. This helps prevent pneumonia — a real risk after abdominal surgery and bed rest.

7. Blood Clot Prevention

This is critical after major surgery + ICU + recent travel.

8. Mental Health

9. Cortisol & Stress

To help cortisol normalise

10. Scar Care

Once wounds are closed and stitches/staples removed:

11. When to Go Back to Hospital — IMMEDIATELY

Go to A&E or call your surgical team without delay if you experience any of the following:

  • Fever above 38°C / 100.4°F
  • Sudden severe abdominal pain
  • Wound opening, leaking, or smelling
  • Unable to keep food or water down for 24+ hours
  • Blood in stool
  • Calf pain or swelling (sign of DVT)
  • Shortness of breath (sign of pulmonary embolism)

12. What Recovery Actually Looks Like

Week 1–2: Mostly bed and sofa. Walking to the kitchen feels like an achievement. This is normal.
Week 3–4: Slightly more energy. Still tiring easily. Appetite slowly returning.
Week 5–8: Feeling more human. Still no lifting or exercise. Wound area may feel tight.
Month 3–6: Gradual return to normal activities. Internal healing continues long after external wounds close.
Realistic timeline: Full recovery from open abdominal surgery with complications is 3–6 months. Not 6 weeks.

13. Practical Comforts

14. A Note for Family & Caregivers

  • He may not ask for help even when he needs it
  • Prepare meals in advance, portion them, and leave them accessible
  • Don't ask "how are you feeling?" every hour — ask "what do you need?"
  • The emotional recovery often lags behind the physical — patience is everything