9/17/2002
General Instructions-Foot/Ankle Surgery
James J. Davidson, M.D.
Jeffrey A. McMath, M.D.
Thomas M. Raabe, M.D.
Phillip E, Havens, M.D.
Ohio Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine, Inc.
301 W. Wallace St.
Findlay, Ohio 45840
(419) 424-0131
Fax (419) 424-5595
672 Miami St.
Tiffin, Ohio 44883
(419) 448-7424
Fax (419) 448-0623
501 Van Buren St.
Fostoria, Ohio 44830
(419) 436-0996
Fax (419) 436-6682
www.ohioorthopaedics.com
Thank you for choosing
Ohio Orthopaedics to take care of your surgical needs.
We wish to provide the best Orthopedic, Foot/Ankle, and Sports Medicine
Surgical care in Northwest Ohio for you and your family.
This requires motivated patients, dedicated therapists, and meticulous
surgery to make this happen. The better your
understanding about what we expect, the sooner we can achieve our goals to get you back to
your expected lifestyle or occupation. This
sheet provides valuable information to make your surgery more successful and less
stressful. After reading this sheet entirely
please ask any questions you have or call the office to clarify anything. We wish to communicate better with our patients to
achieve a common goal!
Prior to Surgery
- If indicated,
your physician and his office staff will arrange a visit to see a physical/occupational
therapist prior to your surgery. This visit
may provide you with valuable information about your rehabilitation immediately following
surgery and equipment you will need for your recovery.
- Shower
normally the evening or morning prior to your surgery.
Do not apply any lotions, make-up, or perfumes to the operative area
(leg/foot/ankle) prior to your surgery. Do
not shave any areas the day of your surgery; if this is required, it will be done by
surgery personnel.
- If you develop
any rashes, cuts, burns on the affected leg prior to surgery, let the office know by phone
in advance of your surgery date.
- Do not have
anything to eat or drink after midnight prior to you surgery unless given specific
instructions to do so. You may have a sip
of water with any scheduled heart, blood pressure, thyroid or breathing medication. Take this at the time you normally take it. Do not take your regularly scheduled
Diabetes medication unless specifically instructed by your medical doctor or surgeon.
- If you in any
way feel sick (cold, flu, infections) let our office know in advance so that arrangements
can be made to reschedule if necessary.
Day of Surgery
- Arrive an
(1) hour ahead of surgery for the Findlay Surgery Center (2 hours ahead for Blanchard
Valley, Fostoria Community, or Tiffin Mercy Hospitals).
- Bring all
equipment (braces, crutches, cooler, etc.) obtained from your therapist to your surgery. Let surgery personnel know you have these
already!
- Let our office
know where we can reach you at all times the day of your surgery. Schedules change with cancellations and delays,
which may make it necessary to adjust your surgery time.
- Do not
wear jewelry on the leg that we will be operating on.
This will only require more administrative time to provide safekeeping during your
surgery.
- Take
medications as instructed above.
- Bring this
instruction sheet with you at the time of your surgery!
After Surgery
- Pain control-
Be certain to take prescribed pain medication as instructed. Do not supplement the pain medication with
Tylenol (acetaminophen), since many narcotic pain medications have this already in them. Resume anti-inflammatories such as ibuprofen after
your surgery, which will better supplement your prescribed pain medication. Begin taking your pain medication at the first
hint of pain. Any delays may make pain
difficult to relieve later.
- Eat lightly
for 24 hours after your surgery. Nausea is
common because of pain, anesthetic agents, and pain medications. Pain medications are better tolerated with
something small on your stomach rather than on an empty stomach. Try a variety of fluids after surgery (water,
sports drinks, clear pop, jello). Fluids are
the most important after surgery, not food; dehydration (not starvation) is a
common cause of readmission after surgery. Avoid
it!
- You do not
need antibiotics at home after your surgery. In
order to prevent infection longer acting and more potent antibiotics were given at the
time of your surgery, which will cover you afterwards.
- Use an ice bag
if necessary for 48 hours after your surgery. Splints
or casts can still allow for therapeutic cooling (be sure the bag does not leak!). Ice can be used longer than 48 hours if desired.
- If you have a soft
bandage, remove the bandage 2 days after your surgery.
Leave sutures and butterfly strips alone until seeing your physician in the office. Recover with a dry gauze pad and tape (available
at any drug store). Splints, casts,
or pins should be left alone and kept dry until seeing your physician in the office.
- Call 424-0131
in Findlay (436-0996 in Fostoria, 448-7424 in Tiffin) to make a follow-up appointment at
the specified interval. This should be done
the first business day after your surgery.
- Keep the
incision(s) dry. You may shower by
covering the leg/ankle with a waterproof bag. Baths
are allowed, but the incision may not be soaked. After
showering cover your incision with a band-aid or dry gauze.
Do not use antibiotic ointments unless instructed to do so. The incisions or pins may be cleaned with hydrogen
peroxide.
- Sleep with the
leg elevated the first few days after your surgery.
This will keep your foot/ankle above your heart and reduce throbbing. Wrapping a pillow around the foot at night may
protect and elevate the extremity while sleeping.
- Unless
otherwise instructed, you may fully weight-bear on the leg with crutches, a walker,
or a cane starting the day of your surgery. Restrict
activity to meal and bathroom privileges only the first 2 days stressing elevation,
not weight-bearing.
- Understand
your precautions prior to your surgery to protect what we have repaired. Bunion surgery patients may not weight-bear fully
for 4-6 weeks after surgery, for example. Please
discuss these precautions with your physician or your therapist for a full understanding.
- Any unexplained
pain, redness, cloudy drainage, bleeding, wound separation, pins backing out, or fevers should
be reported to your physician as soon as possible.
Certain amounts of redness around sutures or clear red or pink drainage is common
after surgery, however, any concerning findings should be brought to our attention.
- Any
questions or problems can be taken care of 24 hours a day, 7 days a week by calling
(419) 424-0131. A covering physician for
Ohio Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine, Inc. can address these issues any time that they arise. Patients are encouraged, if at all possible, to
call Monday through Friday, 8am to 5pm to leave a message for your physician for
non-emergent problems. Your physician will be
happy to return your call to discuss your question or problem.
Please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions or
problems. We realize people do not go through
surgery every day, but sometimes assume incorrectly what all patients know or understand. We use these instructions to better communicate
with you and provide a handy reference for valuable information to make your surgery very
successful.
Bring
this instruction sheet with you at the time of your surgery with any questions written in
the space below!