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Meet Jeff
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Meet Jeff

Jeff, 41, first noticed a small lump in his groin when he and his family were preparing for a long-awaited ski trip in Colorado. He suspected he might have a hernia, but he decided to ignore the lump and go on the trip anyway. He was afraid his doctor would tell him to stay home.


Even after the ski trip, Jeff put off seeing his doctor. Like so many people who ignore their hernias, Jeff had learned to live with the painful bulge that got bigger and bigger as the day progressed. "I work in the office of an electric company," says Jeff, "so my days weren't that strenuous. I never could have kept going so long if I worked in the field."

Finally, Jeff had to admit that the hernia was interfering with his life. The growing bulge was now accompanied by a painful burning sensation. "I knew I couldn't do everything I wanted to do," he admits. "I had let it go too far and was finally willing to do whatever it took to get it fixed." Jeff's doctor told him that he had come in just in time. His hernia was in danger of becoming strangulated. "We scheduled tension-free repair surgery around my work schedule,"Jeff recalls. "I had it done right around the New Year’s holiday so that I’d have a few days off in addition to the days I was going to take off for recovery. I went in on a Thursday morning and was home that afternoon."

Like most people who undergo hernia repair surgery, Jeff had little idea of what to expect. "Everyone at the hospital was great. They made me feel really comfortable. The anesthesiologist even told me that he had had hernia surgery, and there was nothing to worry about."

Jeff remembers that it was painful to sit up in the recovery room, but a day later he was up and about."My wife and I even stopped in at a friend's New Years Eve party."

Jeff advises patients preparing for surgery to wear loose-fitting clothes and shoes without laces. "I wish I'd thought of that," he says. "The jeans I wore that day were a little too tight, and stepping up into our van to go home was a challenge."

"My children are nine and seven, so they were old enough to understand what was happening to me," says Jeff. "I showed them the bulge and explained what a hernia is. I told them that I was going to have to have it fixed so that I could remain active." The day before surgery, Jeff's in-laws picked up the kids and kept them through the weekend. "It was a great help because my wife was able to concentrate on helping me for a few days."

"My doctor warned me that I would get tired if I stayed at work too long the first week I went back," says Jeff. "He was right. After about five hours, I was exhausted. By the end of that first week, though, I was back on my old schedule."

Risks and Complications
All surgical procedures are associated with some risk. Talk to your surgeon prior to surgery about possible risks and complications.