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Heart Procedures - Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery (CABG) - Page 6 |
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Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery (CABG)
What to Expect
- The Acute Care Unit - Your recovery will continue to progress here.
You will sit up in a chair for your meals. Your diet will be advanced to solid
foods as tolerated, but you may be on a low-salt, low-fat, low-cholesterol
diet. If you have not been on this type of diet before, you can request to
talk with a dietitian.
Your heart rhythm may continue to be monitored by telemetry, which is a type
of "long-distance" heart monitoring. You will have electrodes on
your chest attached to a small box with wires, which you will wear at all
times. The small box sends your EKG signal to a central monitoring station,
which is monitored constantly by trained staff. You can get out of bed and
move around while you are being monitored by telemetry.
You will begin to walk around, first in your room, then out in the hall for
increasing distances. Your nurse or an assistant will assist you until you
reach the point where you can walk around with no assistance.
You will continue to cough and perform deep breathing exercises and use the
incentive spirometer every two hours or so while awake. You may stop wearing
oxygen once it has been determined that your oxygen levels are stable without
them.
Your IV line and the pacing wires will be discontinued within a couple of
days after you leave the ICU.
- Discharge to home - Your nurse and other hospital staff will begin
to give you and your family instructions regarding how to take care of yourself
when you go home. It is very important that you ask questions if you do not
understand something or if you need additional information.
When you have reached the following milestones, you will be discharged to
go home:
- can walk a certain distance with ease
- can maintain stable vital signs (heart rate, blood pressure, temperature,
and breathing rate)
- food intake is adequate
- all discharge instructions have been received
- Length of stay - In general, patients may go home within a week of
their heart surgery. Patients who do extremely well after surgery may go home
three or four days after surgery. However, your individual situation will
determine how long you stay in the hospital. People who have conditions such
as diabetes, lung disease, kidney disease, or those who have had heart surgery
before tend to take longer to recuperate.
- Recuperation time - It may take about six to eight weeks before you
feel like yourself again after the surgery. For some people, recovery may
take more or less time. The length of your recuperation will depend on your
individual situation.
page six
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