Well, the first surgery, I don't remember anything about, I got the scars to show for it.
I had heart surgery at three days old. I was born as a blue baby and have congenital heart disease. They did the surgery to keep me alive untill I was a little older to have major heart surgery.
At 16 months old, I had open heart surgery and made it. I had a blood transfusion for both the minor and then the major heart surgery. I had a very large amount of blood giving to me for my open heart surgery and at the time, it wasn't screen and some of it had HIV-1 in it.
I had my nose fix and sinuses surgery. They broke my nose, when they had to put a tube in my nose, when I had my open heart surgery. My nose work, but the bone was off, do to them putting the tube in my nose. They couldn't do anything about it untill I got older and when they did the surgery, they thought that my sinuses problems would go away. I got sick a lot and when they went and saw that everything was fine, they started to do tests and found out that I had the AIDS virus.
I then had central venous catheter surgery a few times. The first time surgery was a failed. They were trying to put in my arm, but they couldn't find a vain and kept pulling it in and out over and over again. I was awake ofr this and they quit after I was in so much pain. The reaoson why I was going to have a central venous catheter put in as because I had germ that I was fighting at the same time that I was fighting the AIDS virus. One of the meds to fight the germ was in a shot form and had to be giving in my thigh every day. So that I wouldn't have to deal with any shots anymore, we tired the catheter surgery.
After that failed, they went and put the central venous catheter in my chest and I was put to asleep for that. After I got over the germ that I was fighting and didn't have to take any of the meds anymore. I had it taken out and I was awake for that, since it was a day surgery and there was not much to it. They numb me in the chest area and Wee, it came out. It did feel like I was a doll with a pull string that doesn't snap back.
A few days before Christmas of 1994, I had a thymus transplant. I was the first of three children/teen with AIDS to be giving this kind of transplants in the US. I was the only one that made it after having the surgery and my t cells did come up a bit, before I could get on better AIDS meds. They thought that maybe the thymus transplant could be used to fight aids and babies or kids that were born without a immune system.
The thymus is an organ located in the upper anterior portion of the chest cavity just behind the sternum. It is the organ that does the production and maturation of the T cells.
I only had half of my thymus from the start. When they did the open heart surgery, they have to remove some of it to get to the heart, so lucky me!
Then in 2001, I had to have surgery on one of my artery, because scar tissue from my open heart surgery (your starting to see a pattern here with this) had form in one of my artery. They went in with a catheter first to see where it was and then they use the catheter to cut it out of my artery.
I also have had pacemaker surgery, one in 1998, which was a single chamber pacemaker and it work for a bit. They did start to find a problem as it wasn't doing its job right, so they put a dual chamber pacemaker in 2001 and did it the same time that I had my surgery on one of my artery to remove the scar tissue.
And that's all the surgeries that I have had for now.
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