Find clinic locations for Fort HealthCare and affiliated clinics and services in Jefferson County, Wisconsin.
Find services offered by Fort HealthCare and affiliated clinics in Jefferson County, Wisconsin.
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Surgery is the most common treatment for kidney cancer. The goal is to take out the tumor or tumors. Sometimes the entire kidney is removed. Nearby lymph nodes might be taken out too.
Your doctor may advise surgery to treat your kidney cancer if:
Kidney cancer surgery may be done in many ways. The type of surgery done depends on how big the tumor is and where it is in the kidney:
All surgery has risks. The risks of kidney surgery include:
Your risks depend on your overall health, the type of surgery you need, and other factors. Talk with your doctor about which risks apply most to you.
Your health care team will talk with you about the surgery choices that are best for you. You may want to bring a family member or close friend with you to appointments. Write down questions you want to ask about your surgery. Make sure to ask:
Before surgery, tell your health care team if you are taking any medicines. This includes prescription and over-the-counter medicines, vitamins, herbs, and other supplements. It also includes marijuana or illegal drugs. This is to make sure you're not taking anything that could affect the surgery. After you've discussed all the details with the surgeon, you'll sign a consent form that says that the doctor can do the surgery.
You'll also meet the anesthesiologist and can ask questions about the anesthesia and how it will affect you. Be sure to tell the doctor if you had problems with anesthesia in the past. Before surgery starts, an anesthesiologist or a nurse anesthetist will give you certain medicines (called anesthesia) that make you fall asleep so you don't feel pain.
You'll wake up in a recovery room. You'll be watched closely as you fully wake up and are able to talk to the nurses. You may have to stay in the hospital for about 1 to 7 days, depending on the type of surgery you had.
For the first few days after surgery, you're likely to have pain from the incision. Your pain can be controlled with medicine. Talk with your doctor or nurse about your choices for pain relief. Some people don't want to take pain medicine, but doing so can help you recover and heal. For instance, if you don't control pain well, you may not want to cough, turn often, or get out of bed, all of which you need to do as you recover from surgery.
It may be uncomfortable to breathe deeply after surgery. You will be asked to do deep breathing exercises to keep you from getting a lung infection (pneumonia),
You will likely have a urinary catheter for a few days. This is a tube put through your urethra (the tube that carries urine out of your body) and into your bladder so that your urine drains into a bag outside your body. You may go home with the catheter for a while.
You may have bowel problems right after surgery. If you have diarrhea, ask what you can do about it. Sometimes diet changes can help. Constipation is common from using certain pain medicines, not moving much, or not eating and drinking as much as usual. Talk with your doctor or nurse about getting more dietary fiber or using a stool softener.
When you get home, you may get back to light activity within a week or two. You should not do any strenuous activity or heavy lifting for at least 6 weeks.
You may feel sore, tired or weak for a while. The amount of time it takes to recover from surgery is different for each person. But you may not feel like yourself for a few months. You'll be able to get your incision wet in the shower. But to reduce your risk of infection, don't take baths or swim. Ask your doctor when it's OK for you to drive.
Your health care team will tell you what kinds of activities are safe for you while you recover.
Your doctor will use blood tests to follow how well your remaining kidney works. You may need more treatment after surgery. This will not start until you've had time to heal. Your doctor will talk with you about the next steps of treatment and when it will start. Make sure you know what to do and make a follow-up appointment.
You may need to take medicine when you go home, such as pain medicine or antibiotics. It's important to know what you're taking. Get a written list of the names of all your medicines. Ask your health care team how to take them, how they work, what they're for, and what side effects they might cause.
Talk with your doctors about what problems to watch for and when to call them. Call right away if you have any of these problems after surgery:
Make sure you know who and what number to call with problems or questions. Also be sure you know what number to call to get help after office hours and on weekends and holidays.