Author Topic: Personality Changes After Surgery  (Read 20590 times)

KellyD

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Personality Changes After Surgery
« on: February 27, 2008, 07:46:38 am »
I am looking for anyone that can give me help and advice. My husband had an acoustic neuroma removed two weeks ago. He developed some complications with his heart rate and was in the hospital for ten days. We are home now, thank goodness. Physically he looks great. He still has head "fogginess", facial weakness and tinnitus. The largest problem I see is that his personality is different. He mood/affect is flat and pretty emotionless. Has anyone ever seen this? If so, was it temporary? I am scared beyond belief that I will not have my husband back.

Thanks for any help you can give me.

Joef

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Re: Personality Changes After Surgery
« Reply #1 on: February 27, 2008, 08:17:26 am »
Its been only 2 weeks!! ... I did not feel myself for at least a few months.... also I would assume he is still on Meds... !!  :o
4 cm AN/w BAHA Surgery @House Ear Clinic 08/09/05
Dr. Brackmann, Dr. Hitselberger, Dr. Stefan and Dr. Joni Doherty
1.7 Gram Gold Eye weight surgery on 6/8/07 Milford,CT Hospital

Brendalu

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Re: Personality Changes After Surgery
« Reply #2 on: February 27, 2008, 09:59:09 am »
Kelly,
Your husband has had major surgery and when it comes to the brain, a lot of people are affected differently by that fact alone.  Give him time, love and support.  He'll be better than ever once he realizes he survived and is thankful.  For some of us, it takes longer than for others.  At two weeks, he is about on target to still be in a fog.  We are all here for you.  I'll keep you both in my thoughts and prayers.
Brenda
Brenda Oberholtzer
AN surgery 7/28/05
Peyman Pakzaban, NS
Chester Strunk, ENT

Joef

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Re: Personality Changes After Surgery
« Reply #3 on: February 27, 2008, 11:51:44 am »
I might add that I was still on a walker at 2 weeks !!!! I was in sad shape.. but today I'm kayaking every chance I get.. but does not come back over night.. its a long process
« Last Edit: February 27, 2008, 02:19:02 pm by Joef »
4 cm AN/w BAHA Surgery @House Ear Clinic 08/09/05
Dr. Brackmann, Dr. Hitselberger, Dr. Stefan and Dr. Joni Doherty
1.7 Gram Gold Eye weight surgery on 6/8/07 Milford,CT Hospital

cecile k

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Re: Personality Changes After Surgery
« Reply #4 on: February 27, 2008, 11:53:49 am »
Oh my! It took me two months before my head felt anywhere near "normal". Give your hubby LOTS of time....medication alone does strange things to ones head....

Boppie

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Re: Personality Changes After Surgery
« Reply #5 on: February 27, 2008, 12:16:21 pm »
Kelly, You and your husband have been through a big trauma.  Your husband might be looking at a calm after the storm.  Think of healing in terms of weeks and months.  You will both see a different picture after two months post op.  Reading threads here on the post op folder might give you more insights.  Each of us heals in a similar sequence but at a different pace. 
God Bless you!

Jim Scott

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Re: Personality Changes After Surgery
« Reply #6 on: February 27, 2008, 01:06:17 pm »
Hi, Kelly.  Welcome to the forum.

I'm sorry you have to deal with this but frankly, AN post-operative fatigue and listlessness is not uncommon.  Some AN patients go through it quickly and some take longer.  I was quite fatigued and listless for about 3 days post-op.  By two weeks, I was driving again.  However, I was even more impatient than usual for quite some time after my surgery (about six months) to the point where my very supportive wife of 37 years asked the doctor (privately) if the surgery could alter my personality.   He said it was possible.  Not due to the actual tumor removal but due to the shock to my psyche from the reality of having this major medical crisis (I had hardly ever been ill up until then) and the fact that my formally excellent hearing was now compromised and wasn't going to improve as well as my forced realization that I was mortal and physically vulnerable, something I only thought of in the abstract, up until my AN diagnosis.

As prior posters have advised, give your man time to heal and adjust.  Help him, but don't be over-solicitous, as my wife was, which made me feel like an invalid.  Men don't like feeling physically vulnerable and/or an object of pity.  After major surgery and heart complications, your husband probably feels like he's been diminished in some respects.  Encourage him to get out and move around and, in time, to do the things he used to do.  Ask him for help if you need it, even if it's only to reach something you can't.  He needs to feel useful again, not like a sickly burden you have to take care of.  I know.  I felt that way for awhile and I highly resented it.  No one's fault...certainly not my loving wife's doing, but I needed to feel competent and effective and until I did, I was crabby and detached.  Your husband may be experiencing the same feelings, so give him time and don't 'smother' him.  Let him be the man he is, not a frail 'patient' who needs constant supervision.  I trust he'll be fine in due time.

Jim
4.5 cm AN diagnosed 5/06.  Retrosigmoid surgery 6/06.  Follow-up FSR completed 10/06.  Tumor shrinkage & necrosis noted on last MRI.  Life is good. 

Life is not the way it's supposed to be. It's the way it is.  The way we cope with it is what makes the difference.

KellyD

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Re: Personality Changes After Surgery
« Reply #7 on: February 27, 2008, 02:38:12 pm »
Thank all of you for your comments thus far. It is helpful- especially since I can not sleep at night thinking that not only will I never have my husband back, but how will we manage with our kids, work and all of that.

I have no problem with the fact that his head hurts, or that he has the facial weakness, or that he has no hearing in that ear (They called it a "dead ear" at the ENT today). Likewise, as much as he can do we are letting him do- go out to lunch, eat dinner with the kids,etc.

I guess my biggest concern and fear is that I see personality changes- inability to make a decision, lack of any emotion, lack of expression- not facially because I know that is to be expected, but emotionally. As if it is all gone.  I really do not recogize the person who has been my best friend for 19 years and it is real lscary to me. I have been reading about whether the surgery could have caused some type if damage to his frontal lobe. If you all tell me that this is probably a temporary thing, then I feel much better. I have been unable to find any literature on it and that is why I joined the group.

Thanks again to all of you.

LADavid

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Re: Personality Changes After Surgery
« Reply #8 on: February 27, 2008, 03:33:55 pm »
Hi Kelly
Don't be concerned.  Somewhere in all the pre-op literature I received, I read something about a post-op depression.  It sounds like a normal thing.  I'm three months from my surgery and I'm still dazed and confused.  I do get out and run a little, but I feel a bit bobble-headed.  And I do feel a bit anti-social -- especially in conversations or talking on the phone.  Am I myself yet?  No way near. But I see small steady improvements.  And I know it must be hard for people to adjust to the hearing loss.  Mine was nearly gone before the surgery so there really wasn't an adjustment.  I guess the best thing you can do for both of you is be patient.  I'm finding that has been the toughest thing for me.  But based on what I've heard from others, everything does return to normal eventually.
Best Wishes
David
Right ear tinnitus w/80% hearing loss 1985.
Left ear 40% hearing loss 8/07.
1.5 CM Translab Rt ear.
Sort of quiet around here.
http://my.calendars.net/AN_Treatments

OMG16

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Re: Personality Changes After Surgery
« Reply #9 on: February 27, 2008, 08:35:46 pm »
This is all very good advice.  I agree that at 2 weeks it is very early and should be expected.  My husband and I both had surgery in the last 6 months (not brain surgery) and we both were amazed at the post op recovery period being harder than we anticipated.  It is very hard to go through the type of surgery he had and as our primary care Dr said there is always a component of depression that goes with chronic health problems.  So I would give it more time and if you think he needs a little help getting through this talk to him honestly and get the help both of you need. Their are counselors that specialize in chronic illnesses and dealing with post op issues.

If you are needing someone to talk to one on one please feel free to PM me.  I am here to help you with this if you need it.  Kisses to your forehead.  :-* 16
I believe you are given choices in life and it is not what has happened to you that defines who you are.  It is how you handle the situation and finding the positive in an almost hopeless situation that counts the most.  My son is my hero and I have had the pleasure of learning this from him.

Kaybo

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Re: Personality Changes After Surgery
« Reply #10 on: February 27, 2008, 09:26:06 pm »
Kelly~
Hi!  I ask my sweet hubby about this and he said that patience and prayer is the best thing he would advise.  We had been married just over a year when they found my tumor & operated right away.  Tough stuff for anyone, but especially someone who was pretty much stilll a newlywed!! :o)  I know that it was very hard on him. 
I had a stroke on the operating table and a few others here have mentioned some of the same things that I went thru after the surgery that I always attributed to the stroke -- either way, I know that a lady (not old) at our church had a stroke a couple of years ago and she was VERY "flat" (tone especially) for a good while, but it is getting better.  I don't think that mine even lasted that long.  You know, I just remembered about how I had been back at my in-laws for a few days (so it was around 2 weeks) and a Weight Watchers commercial came on TV and I started laughing.  My hubby, mom & MIL all started laughing, but they really didn't know what I was laughing at -- later they told me that they were just so relieved that I was laughing b/c I hadn't smiled/laughed since the surgery and they were afraid that I never would again.  OH, & the reason I was laughing was b/c I had been overweight before my surgery but pretty much lost 50 pounds overnight.  I told Dave (in a slurred voice, of course), "Boy, have I got a secret weight loss program for them!!!"
I am sure that it is so hard, but try to be patient!!
K
 
Translab 12/95@Houston Methodist(Baylor College of Medicine)for "HUGE" tumor-no size specified
25 yrs then-14 hour surgery-stroke
12/7 Graft 1/97
Gold Weight x 5
SSD
Facial Paralysis-R(no movement or feelings in face,mouth,eye)
T3-3/08
Great life!

SherryLB

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Re: Personality Changes After Surgery
« Reply #11 on: March 04, 2008, 02:06:32 pm »
I am new to the ANA forum -- but have often read on it for some insight into what we went through!  I wish I had found this before my husband's surgery.  He had an AN (approx 5cm) removed two years ago.  Little did we know the life altering changes it would bring!  I too feel he underwent a major personality change.  It is like he has no emotions, etc.  There were many things that happened -- he was in the hospital for two weeks, than in a rehabilitation facility for two weeks.  When I brought him home he still could hardly walk.  I never dreamt it was going to be like that.  He is now back to work, but is EXHAUSTED when he comes home.

People will ask how he is -- good as can be expected.  But I have had to adjust to this new person.  It is not easy for anyone.  I wish there was a place for spouses to talk. 


OMG16

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Re: Personality Changes After Surgery
« Reply #12 on: March 04, 2008, 02:32:30 pm »
Sherry I do not know about the spouse issues, however my son has gone through the same sort of changes.  The no emotions thing is what they call flat affect and he does indeed suffer from this.  Your husbands tumor was very large and it is a known fact that after brain surgery and possible traumatic brain injury that the exhaustion is always a very real component.  It is so hard having to be a care taker of a family member.  This I know all to well.  I to did not find this site until after surgery and only had minimal time to read posts while helping my son through all of his recovery.  My son is now almost 3 years post op and still making improvements.  We have had to help him to express himself in the right ways and make him aware that with his flat affect his peers would sometimes be offended by the way he responded.  We were unaware of this and learned the hard way as he lost many friends.

I am always willing to talk to you.  You can send a PM to me anytime.  I feel your pain and hope that I can help you with this.  If you send a PM let me know where you live and I can help you find resources in you area for a support group.  There are many to choose from for care providers, brain tumor survivors and sometime stroke groups that can help due to the same sort of issues you are dealing with.  Hang in there and we can help you along.  Kisses to your forehead.  :-* 16
I believe you are given choices in life and it is not what has happened to you that defines who you are.  It is how you handle the situation and finding the positive in an almost hopeless situation that counts the most.  My son is my hero and I have had the pleasure of learning this from him.

Kaybo

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Re: Personality Changes After Surgery
« Reply #13 on: March 04, 2008, 08:48:24 pm »
Sherry~
I have always felt that my sweet hubby had a LOT of adjusting to do after my surgery.  I was prettty young and we had only been married about a year -- I've always said that he didn't end up with the girl he married.  We have a wonderful life, but it is very different thatn how it started!  A lady at church had a stroke and I suggested that he take her hubby out to dinner b/c I thought that maybe he could feel free to "vent" to someone who had been there with a spouse in the same situation.  I know it has to be hard.
I still get VERY tired at night, but it is not usually the exhaustion that I felt the 1st few years out.  Now it more like once or twice a week instead of every night.  I also pretty much HAVE to nap at lease once on the weekend if I want the week to go smoother.  I am 12 years out now -- I would say it took a good 3-5 years to get where I am now!  I know I am not a spouse but I am a good listener if you ever want to "talk" please PM me and I can give you my number.  Also if you would like, you can check out my blog & see what it like 12 years out(for me).  It is www.threecurlygirlies.blogspot.com (you have to start at the end if you want to read from the beginning).
Good Luck!
K
Translab 12/95@Houston Methodist(Baylor College of Medicine)for "HUGE" tumor-no size specified
25 yrs then-14 hour surgery-stroke
12/7 Graft 1/97
Gold Weight x 5
SSD
Facial Paralysis-R(no movement or feelings in face,mouth,eye)
T3-3/08
Great life!

tony

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Re: Personality Changes After Surgery
« Reply #14 on: March 05, 2008, 01:40:34 am »
The whole "time-frame" to this (for me) just beggars belief
- I recall I lost the touch sensation in my mouth,
yet gradually over 12mths it came back
The full fitness thing took a year too
- that involved many tears
I guess we all see the TV Hospital shows
- and the movies, where despite
multiple wounds - the hero bounces back a week later
to capture "goldfinger" or similar
In real life its not quite like that
Once you get up to the 3-4-5 cm range
to walk away a month later is doing very well indeed
Its a rebuilding process - which is ongoing
Can I wish you all well with it
Best Regards
Tony