Taking care of your lungs after surgery
is an important part of the success of your surgery. It
is important that your lungs are working at their best
following surgery to ensure that you get plenty of oxygen
to the tissues of the body that are trying to heal. Lungs
that are not exercised properly can lead to poor blood
oxygen levels and even develop pneumonia (an infection
in the lungs) after surgery.
There are several reasons that your lungs may not work
normally after surgery. If you were put to sleep with a
general anesthetic for your surgery, the medications used
for the anesthesia may temporarily cause the lungs not
to function quite as well as normal. This is one reason
that a spinal-type anesthetic is recommended whenever possible.
Lying in bed prevents completely normal function of the
lungs and the medications you take for pain may cause you
not to breathe as deep as you normally would.
You can think of the lung like a large sponge. All the
small air pockets where the blood receives oxygen are like
the small holes in a sponge. If the small holes collapse,
or squeeze together, no air can get into the holes to supply
oxygen to the blood. When we breathe deeply, the lungs
expand and all the individual holes of the sponge fill
with air. Coughing does the same thing because we increase
the pressure of the air coming into the holes of the sponge.
Lungs that have collapsed areas not only don't move oxygen
into the blood, they cannot remove the fluids and mucous
produced normally by the lungs. This can create an area
that is ripe for developing a place where bacteria can
grow and produce a lung infection, or pneumonia.
After surgery, there are several things you will need to
do to keep your lungs working optimally. Your nurse will
encourage you to take frequent deep breaths and cough frequently,
and will be there to coach you. Getting out of bed, even
upright in a chair, allows the lungs to work much better,
so as soon as possible, you will be allowed to get into a
chair. The respiratory therapist has several tools to help
maintain optimal lung function. The incentive spirometer
is a small device that measures how hard you are breathing
and gives you a tool to help improve your deep breathing.
If you have any other lung disease, such as asthma, the respiratory
therapist may also use medications that are given through
breathing treatments to help open the air pockets in the
lungs. |