Thursday, February 13, 2014

My Final Visit with Dr Norton or NOT?

It's March 22, 2013 and I am at my final visit (or so I thought) with Dr. Norton, the neurosurgeon who did my DBS surgery back in October of 2012. My final visit should have been about eight weeks earlier, but life got in the way. In January, my Wonderful Husband had some health issues, then there was a freak snowstorm in Tucson which required cancellation of an appointment in February and then I got a bad cold and had to cancel another appointment.  So, weeks late, here we are. Dr. Norton checks my DBS settings, takes a quick look at my incisions and declares me "done with him." He says I should have any follow up programming changes either done with Stephanie or with one of the Medtronic representatives when they come to Yuma. I give him a hug and we headed back home.

April of 2013 came and all hell broke loose. I had an abnormal mammogram, which required an ultrasound and then a biopsy. No big deal; this had happened before, so I wasn't concerned. I guess I should have been, because on April 15, 2013 I was told I had cancer in my right breast, and the tumor was just below the DBS generator in my chest. The surgeon I met with in Yuma had never seen a DBS generator before and that made me nervous, but surgery to remove the tumor was tentatively scheduled for May.

Then on April 20, 2013, I felt something "gooey" on my scalp, near the right cap from the DBS surgery. It wasn't blood, just oily. My Wonderful Husband looked and couldn't see anything, until he got out a magnifying glass. There was a very tiny, pin head size spot, where he thought he could see wire or a screw. Phone calls were made, photos taken and enlarged and then emailed to Tucson. 
The spot was really very small, this has been magnified.

Dr. Norton called me very early on Monday morning, April 22, 2013 and said we'd better come right over. So we packed some clothes and took off. He took a look at it and decided it was a wire showing, but that it hadn't come through the skin, yet. It needed to be fixed so surgery was scheduled the next day. 

While I was there, I told him about the cancer and my nervousness about the Yuma surgeon who'd never seen a DBS unit before. His answer, "I'll take care of it and get you the best breast surgeon in Tucson." Dr. Norton called me later in the day to say he'd made an appointment for me on Wednesday with a Dr. Roeder. 

Tuesday, April 23, 2013 I was back in the Operating Room with Dr. Norton. He re-shaved the right side, cut me open, re-arranged the wires and sutured me closed.

On Wednesday we met with the breast surgeon, scheduled the cancer surgery for May 7, 2013 and headed back home to Yuma.

We went back to Tucson on May 3, 2013 to have the scalp sutures removed. Since my cancer surgery was scheduled for a few days later, we just stayed in Tucson. On Monday morning, my Wonderful Husband looked at my scalp and there was a spot that didn't "look right," so back to Dr. Norton's I went.

My scalp had pulled apart between where two of the sutures had been, so I was scheduled to have it fixed, again, on May 9, 2013; two days after my cancer surgery.

Dr. Norton once again, re-shaved the right side, moved the wires some more, and put in even more sutures. This time, he let the sutures in longer and I went back on May 20, 2013 to have them removed. 

I also had a follow up with Dr. Roeder the same day, she said they'd gotten all the cancer, so I decided against any follow up treatment. The oncologists I saw were recommending radiation, but that would have required moving my DBS generator, but after all the scalp problems I had, I said NO.

All went well for about ten days, then my Wonderful Husband spotted some tiny whitish things sticking out of the incision on my scalp. More photos were taken, enlarged and emailed to Tucson. Dr. Norton decided to call in an expert, Dr. Ley, a plastic surgeon to fix my scalp this time.


The white things are Vycril sutures working their way out


On Friday, May 31, 2013 we went back to Tucson and stopped to see Dr. Norton and then went to see Dr. Ley. It seems the tiny white things sticking out of the incision were Vycril sutures, ones that are put under the skin and should have dissolved. Only in my case, they didn't. Instead, they tried to work their way out through the now closed incision.

Dr. Ley said he should be able to fix it and surgery was scheduled for the following Friday, June 7, 2013. Since he had never operated on a person with wires under their scalp, one of the Medtronic representatives, Adam, came to the hospital to show him where the wires were located. My surgery was done on Friday night. Dr. Ley did what he called z-plasty and used a different type of under-suture, just in case my body was rejecting the Vicryl sutures from before. So, once again the right side of my hair was shaved, a little bigger area than the previous times. This time it was much more painful, plus not only did he suture the incision closed, he also used a surgical glue called dermabond.


Z-plasty with sutures and dermabond glue on my head
It was close to 11 pm before I got out of the hospital, so we stayed in a hotel right next door and met Dr. Ley on Saturday morning at his office nearby. He gave me the all clear to head back to Yuma, told my Wonderful Husband what to look for and scheduled a follow up appointment for June 24, 2013.


Dr. Ley and YumaBev at his office Saturday morning

Everyday my Wonderful Husband would look at my incision and it all looked good. As my hair grew back, it lifted the glue off my scalp and itched like crazy, but I didn't touch it. Finally, June 24, 2013 came and we went back to Tucson. Dr. Ley very carefully cut away the glue and removed the sutures. It took more than an hour. After he was done, he said he thought it would be just fine, and it was! There was an occasional piece of blue suture that would pop up, but within a day, it would fall out on it's own. 

The reason this happened was no one's fault, I just didn't have any extra skin on my scalp. Dr. Norton has done well over 700 of these surgeries and I am the only patient he has had this problem with. However, since I had a problem, he now uses a different technique when he does DBS. Maybe they will name it after me?  ha ha



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