April 30, 2024, Delray Medical Center
SURGERY WENT WELL !!!My surgery this morning to install a PICC line (catheter) into the left side of my neck went well. I will use it at home to continue my six-week-long regimen of daily intravenous antibiotic infusions for a lingering bone infection within my right ankle. The line starts within a vein in my neck and ends as close to my heart as possible.
I had a similar PICC line installed a few years ago for six weeks, when I endured daily (temporary) dialysis due to intravenous antibiotic-induced kidney failure (both kidneys). I also had a similar catheter installed directly into my neck immediately following my quadruple coronary artery bypass surgery in March 2022. (In May 2022, I had two reconstructive chest surgeries.)
I have had so many lines (intravenous lines, midlines, and PICC lines) installed in recent years for bone infections (osteomyelitis) and infections under the skin (cellulitis) within both of my feet and legs due to diabetic ulcers within both of my feet that the veins within both of my arms automatically collapse whenever the doctors try to install new lines. Extensive scar tissue throughout the veins within my arms makes it even more impossible to install these lines, hence the inevitable choice of my neck for this new line.
For about the last two weeks here at the hospital, I have been receiving multiple daily intravenous antibiotics for a bone infection within my right ankle, plus intravenous (and inhaled) steroids (and an inhaled bronchodilator) for my lungs due to difficulty breathing.
(I am expecting to be discharged from the hospital today or at least soon. UPDATE: I expect to be discharged tomorrow.)
I will be using my new PICC line within my neck at home to receive several-times-daily intravenous antibiotic infusions for as long as six weeks, but maybe for four weeks because I have already started receiving the infusions here. I have endured many six-week-long daily antibiotic regimens (at least ten times in recent years) for lingering and returning infections within my feet and legs, as well as within my spine.
A home nurse and my wonderful wife will continue to administer my antibiotic medication at home. The nurse will also change the bandages on my right ankle; however, both wounds are basically healed externally, so a bandage may not be required. The pain and swelling within my right ankle has abated slightly; my podiatrist told me it looks better.
(Many thanks go to my wife and my terrific mother for their support.)
On April 20, 2024, my podiatrist performed surgery on my right ankle: biopsy, deburring, and draining. He has suggested another surgery to clean out the joint within my right ankle and to apply antibiotic cement, but he is not sure how helpful that would be. I declined. He also suggested that I restart hyperbaric treatments to cure my recurring infections, which I will consider. My previous hyperbaric treatments apparently didn't help that much, if at all.
The GOOD NEWS is that after many months since my two spinal surgeries last year, I am now able to sit in a chair for several hours without too much discomfort, and I am also able to walk short distances while using a walker. Those surgeries made it impossible for me to sit and to walk, so at least I have progressed slightly in that unrelated regard.
(In September 2023, I had an abscess (infection) removed within a lower spinal disk. In October 2023, I had a six-hour-long surgery to attach a titanium metal rod to my "collapsing" spine due to a bone infection.
Oh, while here at the hospital this time, I have also received heavy dosages of intravenous Lasix (and Lasix pills) for relief from severe, painful edema within both of my legs, so now you (probably) know how I have been spending much of my time here.