TURP! . . (excuse me)
Just background information:
The human nose and ears continue growing
during a life time and so does the lowly prostate glade. In older men, the prostate becomes so large
that it strangles the urethra and make voiding Impossible. This enlarged prostate condition is called BPH
or Benign Prostate Hyperplasia. One
solution to this problem is to insert a Foley in-dwelling catheter and attached
to a drainage bag which can be emptied daily.
(see pictures below) This is a drawing
of the catheter (the inflatable balloon is inflated with a liquid and syringe)
and the drainage bag with hose reaches down to the floor. My wife fashioned a cloth bag which I could
hang from my neck, but I didn’t go out much and standing in front of class of
kids was out of the question.
I wore a catheter for almost four months
in the vain hope that drugs prescribed would kick in and I would be able to
void normally, but that never happened. I tried to make the best of it by saying it’s
an outside purse when Thais looked at me or even holding the bag up and asking,
“You want some chicken soup?” With the
catheter I had no pain or problems - it was just an esthetic and life style
altering problem. Inserting a catheter
(and I had this done probably six times) was always painful enough to bring
tears to my eyes, but the procedure done by nurses was short and once in caused
no pain at all.
Prostate cancer is the third leading
cause of death in men (females do not have prostate glands) behind lung and
colorectal cancer. I have had one friend
die from prostate cancer and know two others who have been diagnosed with the
disease. If what I write below seems to
make light of prostate cancer, nothing could be further from the truth.
TURP or transurethral resection of the
prostate is the procedure I had on April 24 and I will describe a little in my
personal experience.
BPH is not prostate cancer.
I had the procedure done at Rhuampath [Doctors
Hospital] in Chainat, Thailand. It is a
small private hospital about a half hour drive from my house. I give my overall experience an 8 out of 10
and most of the downside is because virtually no one in the hospital speaks
English – or even cares to try and speak any language other than Thai.
My story begins here:
TURP . . . (excuse me)
“All men who enter here abandon your sense
of personal dignity” - a saying that
should be posted over all urologists’ doors.
Early in April, before the Thai holiday
Songkhran, I had images taken of my swollen prostate gland. There are 74 provinces in Thailand and I am a
big fan of Thai regional government hospitals.
These small hospitals take care of 85 – 90% of aliments (basically for
free), but if you need a gastroenterologist or an urologist or other specialist
you get referred to the province’s main hospital. I have been in the main hospital in Chainat,
Nakhonsawan and Phitsanulok provinces looking for an appointment with an
urologist and/or gastroenterologist and never made connections. So I went to a
small – for profit – hospital about a half hour from my house.
The imaging of my prostate was not a cake walk, but the procedure did not take long. There were three nurses (one just to pin my arms in back of my head) in the operating room plus the urologist Dr. Pichit. Cystoscopy has been around since the mid-1800 but advancements in lighting and conveying images got a lot better with fiber optics around the late 1960s. (You can search Development of the Modern Cystoscope: An Illustrated History if you want a pictorial history of this device/procedure)
Now, images are captured on cell phones. Dr. Pichit showed my wife (but not to me) his cell phone images and explained to her using his index finger and thumb how my prostrate had closed off my urethra by pressing his thumb against his index finger. I would have liked to talk to the doctor myself, but he speaks no English and my Thai is rudimentary at best. Something often gets lost in translation with my wife, too. Asking her a simple question can set off a side trip into why-you-want-to-know-that land. So she set an appointment after Songkhran for the TURP procedure and told me this sometime later.
I arrived on 4/24/2017 at 9 am. I donned the patient gown and had blood taken, an IV started, an EKG and chest x-ray performed while lying on a gurney. For the next three days I would be lying down shifting only from gurney to bed. I met with an internist (who actually spoke some English) who cleared me for surgery, crossing himself as he did (I’m joking, you knew that right?)
We went by elevator to a second floor room where I sidled from gurney to bed. Hospital elevators are different than regular elevators. Not only are they deeper to allow for gurneys, but they move imperceptivity without any jerks or noise. I was thinking this when I noticed my wife (I often call her Chunky-in-charge) had disappeared.
Although I would not be allowed up for three days (you might have put me in a closet because I wasn’t getting out of bed), the room was too small for her liking. She was upstairs checking out the Deluxe rooms, still too small, before settling on the only VIP room. She did this because she expected to stay with me with at least two of her daughters. So I sidled onto a gurney and up to the third floor. The room was spacious, well-appointed and probably could have slept five or more family members. But let me make this clear: I do not consider myself to be a VIP person, nor was I going to get off my bed, so . . . . But I suppose if you divided the number of people staying in the room by the extra cost, it was a deal.
I want to say something about the six-way power hospital bed. My father’s 1956 Cadillac had six-way power seats, but I have never owned a car with power seats. Strangely enough given the bed’s raising, lowering combinations I could never get comfortable. I think I’ve seen a Mr. Bean sketch where he gets compressed like an accordion in one of these beds. Still, they are really a step up from the rock hard, gurney like beds I’ve been on. My bed in the government hospital in Phitsanulok was a piece of plywood in a hall.
I was told I would have the TURP surgery in the evening. In fact, I was shipped up to the operating room at 4 PM. Thai people may say things differently from one town to the next, but 4 pm is not the evening in English. No matter.
I was whisked over an open walkway called the Sky Walk to the operating room. There were four nurses and Dr. Pichit ready for me there. I had little time to take note save for thinking the anesthesiologist looked like Edith Bunker in a snood. She had one word of English which was sleep – which there is no fighting it – so I did.
If you want more (almost too much) information on this procedure you can search this by ctrl and click below (The site is for medical professionals, so I can’t put the url here.)
Transurethral Resection of the Prostate
If you are a
candidate for this procedure, you might want to skip the videos – really.
I was out for about two hours. Dr. Pichit told Chunky that the actual
procedure takes about a half hour. The
doctor cuts off bits of the prostate and forces the tissue up into the bladder.
The rest of the time is in irrigating the bladder to remove the tissue. This irrigation process will go on for the
next two to three days. Prior to going
to surgery, a nurse shaved my right thigh which is where the drainage catheter
(one tube for clear saline to go in and one for blood and guts to come out)
would be taped. The catheter is taut and
in a straight line which means if you even raise your right knee you will get
an oowie pain similar to getting your dick (Johnson or willy for sensitive
viewers) caught in a zipper.
As I was coming too and shivering from
the anesthesia I was then taken on a gurney to ICU.
My wife came in and announced she was
leaving. I considered what she meant by
this, but I was groggy and limply waved good bye.
At this time I had a bottle (the first
of 13) of irrigation fluid going into my bladder and the drainage catheter
coming out. I also had two IV bottles
(big and little) going into my right arm.
Periodically, I would get injections through a neat fire hydrant
apparatus with a couple of outlets.
Hypodermic needles are passé and virtually all drugs enter the body
through the IV. We can be thankful for
that.
In my time in ICU, I felt as if I was
voiding Bobbie pins and I think I saw one fake eye lash courtesy of the
operating staff (I’m joking). But over
time the color of the drainage bag went from tomato red, to strawberry red, to
a rose wine. When the bag turns golden (Gold
is the urologist most perfect hue) you can leave.
After twelve hours in ICU I went to my
VIP room. My time here, flat on my back,
was not fun. At the end of my ICU stay a
nurse said I could have a full breakfast.
This turned out to be a bowl of boiled rice and a small carton of soy
milk. When I made it known that I wanted
neither, Chunky made a trip to a 7-Eleven store and bought 700 baht worth of
junk food. This would keep me and the
girls alive for the next three days.
The girls all have smart phones. They never talk to me and rarely to each
other. When I asked for water, one of
them, without looking up, pointed to the counter beyond my each. Great!
They only stopped watching individual programs when a favorite Thai
program (no English, thank you) came on the TV.
I call this show the Marx brothers do Gilbert and Sullivan. Five middle aged men, at least two in drag, do
pratfalls and make jokes which they laugh at with the audience. Then, one of them will start singing (Wtf). The Thais think this is funny, but I have no
idea why. I’d like to say there is no accounting for taste, but that’s not
strong enough.
I also had to watch some terrible
movies. One set entirely in an eastern
European train yard had Matrix-like bad guys all dressed the same in dark
glasses and black trench coats. In 90
minutes more ammunition was expended here than the Germans spent on the siege
of Leningrad. Another movie had a group
of five mountain climbers in some scary scenes.
Then, these people were in tunnels, then one got his foot caught in a
bear trap (no bear ever appeared), then the five were slowly killed off by a
grubby looking teenage character. If
Aristotle who once asked which do you prefer probably improbabilities or
improbable probabilities had been in the room with me he would have cried out
“For the love of Zeus” and left in five minutes. Unfortunately, caught in a spider’s web of IV
and catheter tubes, I was going nowhere.
The bed was also too far away for the remote to work, too. Sigh.
Dr. Pichit was off on Wednesday (does
this sound like the US), but on Thursday he suggested I stay on more
night. I could get up and walk a
little. I got some contradictory advice
on whether I could use the toilet or had to go in the bed pan or pampers. Chunky didn’t want me to get up. Her eyes narrowed and said you want blood
clot? You want to have surgery again? Finally, I just got up. I could have used help, but got none.
The IV and irrigation bottles ended
during the night. Only the little
plastic fire hydrant remained for drugs.
On Friday morning around 6 am a nurse
came in and unceremoniously (without telling me what she was doing) removed the
drainage catheter (a minor oowie). A
final meeting with Dr. Pichit and the chief nurse around 10 am and we could go
home. Chunky and the girls had brought
in so much junk a shopping cart had to be brought in for all the junk. My Bermuda shorts had disappeared and I had
to leave in my black boxers. My flip
flops had been left in the emergency room on Monday, too, but a hospital
employee found them.
My Bottom Line
It took three hours for my bladder to
get back on track. In six hours I was
voiding, without pain or burning, in a pretty normal manner. Twenty-four hours later I am voiding almost
normally. I am very pleased with the
results.
The total for the procedure and hospital
stay (remember the VIP room) came to $1,700.
The average cost of the procedure in the US is around $10 K (and can be
as high as $20 K). The average cost in a
western hospital in Bangkok that specializes in Medical Tourism is around $4K.
The largest expense in the $1700 bill
was drugs (all those IV and drainage bottles, antibiotics, miscellaneous other
drugs and take home drugs) ran up the total.
One nurse was giving me an injection once and when I asked her what it
was for. She said peptic ulcer. I don’t
believe I have a peptic ulcer. I also
got a shot of morphine in the ICU. The
night nurse asked me several times if I wanted it, so I finally broke down and
said sure.
The $1,700 also included a fee for a
cancer biopsy. I should have had this
first, but I couldn’t make connections at the government hospital. Perhaps because I was old and my PSA (the
indicator of prostate cancer) wasn’t particularly high the two doctors I saw didn’t
want to do the biopsy. Being a
government hospital, there may have been a long waiting list, too . . . I don’t
know. I should know in two weeks if my
prostate (what’s left of it) is cancerous or not. I will keep you posted.
All of this went on my Visa Card which
is just about tapped out. I think if I
make the minimum payments by the time I get it paid off the (Elon) Musketeers
should be playing AA ball on Mars. Sigh.
A year and a half ago I thought I was
dying. I was being kicked out of a government
hospital and Chunky got my oldest son on her smart phone. I had lost 30 pounds and was very
weak. I couldn’t walk by myself and was
not very coherent. Andy started a
GoFundMe campaign and twenty or so people made some very generous
contributions. Today, I am dribbling and
whizzing around and feel capable of work, but my financial situation is still
sketchy.
If anyone has an idea on how I could
make money, (maybe there is a new pet rock fad sweeping America that might
catch on here or knows of a sponsor for my teaching) I’d love to hear it. In the meantime if you’d like to make a small
contribution, I’ll post my
Better yet come to Thailand. I saw an airfare from LAX under $600 which is
half price. There is yet another
spa/motel/restaurant going in near my house.
We could whiz around and have some fun on the cheap.
FG 4/29/2017

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