I always knew my appendix would try to kill me someday

One of my favorite books when I was about 6 or 7 was a collection of short stories from the 1950's, called something like "True Tales of Courage and Adventure". I don't remember the exact title, but you get the drift. Lots of Age of Exploration, Man Against Wilderness, Survival Against All Odds. That sort of thing. One that stood out to me in particular though was a relatively new story when that book was written. It was a story from WWII about an emergency appendectomy performed aboard a submarine with no surgeon and only makeshift tools. Here's a retelling of that story, but the version I read in that True Adventures book was a lot more dramatized, heightening the danger and pain.

I was fascinated by the idea of the appendix. An apparently useless, tiny little organ inside my body that could, without warning, kill me in an extremely painful manner. I began watching myself for signs of appendicitis, gently probing that area of my body to see if today was the day it would turn on me. Every time one of my classmates had a stomachache I would tell them that it was probably their appendix, and then describe in lurid detail the fate that awaited them if they were not quickly seen to. I tried to ask the doctor to preemptively remove my appendix: since I was destined to become an astronaut it made sense just to get it out of the way while I was young. As I grew this obsession faded, as all childhood obsessions do, though an occasional bout of stubborn gas or sore abs from a workout would bring me back to wondering, until waking the next day to find all was well, or at least not worse. Until Memorial Day.

My wife and I were laying in bed watching an episode of Russian Doll. I felt an odd pain in my gut, which I assumed to be gas. After the episode ended I said I needed to get up and walk a bit, hoping to work things out, and she went to sleep. It wasn't truly painful at that point, but it was stubborn, and nothing seemed to shift it. I found my abdomen was sore and swollen as well. I had done a CrossFit "hero" workout the morning of Memorial Day, but no portion of it really worked the abdomen, so that was odd as well. I briefly considered the idea of appendicitis, but the pain was more widespread than I imagined it would be.

I tried to sleep, with poor result, tossing and turning all night unable to get comfortable. When I did sleep I dreamed of submarines and isolated Antarctic outposts and space stations, and taking a knife to my own skin to cut the pain out. About 6AM I awoke and the pain had shifted and sharpened, about midway between my navel and hip on the right side. Sometimes it felt like being stabbed, other times like someone had hit me with a hammer yesterday. My childhood had prepared me for this, and I was almost entirely certain, but I googled my symptoms anyways just to double check. After dressing I called my wife, who had gone on a morning walk.

I was able to function well enough to drive to where she was (about 3 miles away) and switch places so she could take me to the brand-new hospital. Here I do have to give my appendix credit for impeccable timing. The day after a holiday, 7AM on a Tuesday morning in a college town with no students is just about the absolute best time you could pick to go into the ER. Zero wait. They had me in an exam room within 10 minutes, and I was having a CT scan about 20 minutes after that. Blood and urine were collected and analyzed, but the CT was clear: acute appendicitis. Honestly, I was relieved. This stabbing pain that was quickly becoming unbearable had a clear cause, one which I always suspected would be coming for me sooner or later. My biggest fear had been that they would say it wasn't appendicitis and in fact they had no idea what was wrong with me.

Within an hour I was in surgery. My teenage sons were still asleep at home, I left them voice messages just in case. I told my wife to send a text to my mom and dad, and then they wheeled me off. The surgery took only about 35 minutes, and I was awake and alert less than an hour after that. My midsection was sore upon waking, but it was a completely different kind of pain, which was an unimaginable relief. The stabbing pain was gone.

Once the drugs cleared my system I was ready to go. I *walked* out of the hospital less than 6 hours after I struggled to limp in. It was all over and done with before any of the people in my life (except my wife) even knew anything was wrong with me. My mom didn't even have a chance to worry. Modern medicine is amazing. There are 3 small cuts on my stomach, and it's likely they won't even leave noticeable scars. They gave me pain medication I haven't really needed, and I went back to work yesterday. I'm not picking up anything heavy yet, or walking very far, but I'll be able to do a lot of things by early next week and should be back to normal within 3 weeks. The sutures they used are self-dissolving so I don't even need to go in to have stitches taken out.

My experience was about as far as you could get from an apprentice Navy corpsman holding my guts open with spoons while I lay dosed with ether on a wardroom table 100 feet underwater. I'll still count it as an adventure though.
 

thekaj

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I had an appendicitis attack my freshman year in high school. It started to hurt in 2nd period and by 3rd period (Band), I was apparently white as a ghost with pain. I asked the band teacher if I could go to the office, he looked at me, got all wide-eyed and said that yes, I could totally go. Afterwards he said he regretted not sending someone with me. It was a quarter-mile walk from the band room (at the middle school) to the office. The pain got so bad I had a plan to use my last bit of energy to yell out to the people playing tennis before passing out. But I made it. When I got there, I mumbled to the girl sitting there that I think I needed to go home. She couldn't understand me. I tried again, and she still couldn't make it out. That's when one of the secretaries saw me and shouted "YOU NEED TO GO HOME!!!" They put me in the nurse's office, while I could hear the secretary shouting down the hall that I was having an appendicitis attack. While they tried to reach my mom, they called my dad (a teacher there) in. He looked in at me, confirmed that I should go home, and went back to class. I thanked him for his concern.

They eventually got ahold of my mom, who drove in, picked me up, took me home, and then called the doctor to see what to do (not exactly efficient). They said bring me to the hospital, so off we went. I was actually already feeling better by that point, going from "so this is what death feels like" to "I only feel like a few knives are stabbing me right now". The doctors did a few pokes and prodding and an ultrasound. By the time it was all done, the determined that my appendix had gotten swollen, but was already getting better. So they decided not to take it out.

Came back to school the next day to discover that there had been a minor explosion in gossip over whether or not I had died sometime during the day. That I was walking around fine the next day killed off the buzz, and people quickly went back to their normal business.

Still do have my appendix. Wasn't really a fan of how it decided to remind me that day of its existence.
 

Defenestrar

Senator
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Subscriptor++
Did they let you keep it? Like in a jar or something?

How might it fry up with some fava beans and a nice Chianti? I would think a Basilicata might be more appropriately paired but its not my appendix.
If one were to eat an appendix, I'd think it'd be most appropriate to use it as the casing for some sort of small breakfast sausage. Maybe with maple?
 

Graeme K

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I had an appendicitis attack my freshman year in high school. It started to hurt in 2nd period and by 3rd period (Band), I was apparently white as a ghost with pain. I asked the band teacher if I could go to the office, he looked at me, got all wide-eyed and said that yes, I could totally go. Afterwards he said he regretted not sending someone with me. It was a quarter-mile walk from the band room (at the middle school) to the office. The pain got so bad I had a plan to use my last bit of energy to yell out to the people playing tennis before passing out. But I made it. When I got there, I mumbled to the girl sitting there that I think I needed to go home. She couldn't understand me. I tried again, and she still couldn't make it out. That's when one of the secretaries saw me and shouted "YOU NEED TO GO HOME!!!" They put me in the nurse's office, while I could hear the secretary shouting down the hall that I was having an appendicitis attack. While they tried to reach my mom, they called my dad (a teacher there) in. He looked in at me, confirmed that I should go home, and went back to class. I thanked him for his concern.

They eventually got ahold of my mom, who drove in, picked me up, took me home, and then called the doctor to see what to do (not exactly efficient). They said bring me to the hospital, so off we went. I was actually already feeling better by that point, going from "so this is what death feels like" to "I only feel like a few knives are stabbing me right now". The doctors did a few pokes and prodding and an ultrasound. By the time it was all done, the determined that my appendix had gotten swollen, but was already getting better. So they decided not to take it out.

Came back to school the next day to discover that there had been a minor explosion in gossip over whether or not I had died sometime during the day. That I was walking around fine the next day killed off the buzz, and people quickly went back to their normal business.

Still do have my appendix. Wasn't really a fan of how it decided to remind me that day of its existence.

I did not realize appendicitis was a thing that could resolve in this fashion.
 

krimhorn

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Came back to school the next day to discover that there had been a minor explosion in gossip over whether or not I had died sometime during the day. That I was walking around fine the next day killed off the buzz, and people quickly went back to their normal business.
You mean to tell us that you didn't attempt to convince people that you had, in fact, died and come back or were actually zombiethekaj now? Missed opportunity.
 

Wheels Of Confusion

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They’re often filled with feces, and also they will typically look the appendix over and make sure there’s not a tumor hiding in it. So, please don’t eat your appendix!

Also, glad you’re OK!

Think of it as a 'delicacy', quadruple the price and people will line up around the block!
"Sure there's mock appendix made from duck intestines or something, but you just don't get that authentic creamy texture."
 

BenN

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Glad you're OK Bravehamster! In & out in a few hours after an appendectomy is amazing!

I had a similar, but more lengthy, experience when I was 15, except I had no premonition. One minute I was absolutely fine, at home in the UK, the next second I had agonizing pain in my gut. Emergency ambulance called, straight to the hospital, and into emergency surgery. Turned out my appendix had gone all the way to 11 & burst, so I now had acute peritonitis.

After the op I spent a week in hospital, getting hazily & pleasantly addicted to opioids (pethidine), which was awesome when you're 15. I now have a 4 inch scar in my abdomen.

Did they let you keep it? Like in a jar or something?
At the time, my Mum worked in admin at the hospital where I was treated, and she later told me that my appendix was kept in a jar & used for teaching medical students. :eek: :scared:
 

DaveJ

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Glad you're OK! It's crazy how tech has evolved for much faster recovery these days.

I have Hydrocephalus, and I had appendicitis at age 6 while in the hospital in between shunt revisions. I've been told there were 4 or 5 residents clustered around my bed, confused as to why I screamed the place down whenever one of them touched me. "Well it can't be the shunt, that's working fine!" :D
 

yd

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Glad you're OK Bravehamster! In & out in a few hours after an appendectomy is amazing!

I had a similar, but more lengthy, experience when I was 15, except I had no premonition. One minute I was absolutely fine, at home in the UK, the next second I had agonizing pain in my gut. Emergency ambulance called, straight to the hospital, and into emergency surgery. Turned out my appendix had gone all the way to 11 & burst, so I now had acute peritonitis.

After the op I spent a week in hospital, getting hazily & pleasantly addicted to opioids (pethidine), which was awesome when you're 15. I now have a 4 inch scar in my abdomen.

Did they let you keep it? Like in a jar or something?
At the time, my Mum worked in admin at the hospital where I was treated, and she later told me that my appendix was kept in a jar & used for teaching medical students. :eek: :scared:

Indeed, opiods. I can see why they are a massive societal problem. I was in pain, they said they could give me a pain killer, I was like 'yup yup yup'. Then they said 'we need to inject it into your ass cheeks' and I was like 'nope, uh, well, ouch, ok' and then 'aaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhh'. After that, I was more than happy to offer up my ass for a poke....wait, what that didn't come out right :p
 

Carhole

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Good job, Bravehamster. I had my appendix removed late last year after several rounds of crippling pain that on more than one occasion put me in the ER where I was incorrectly diagnosed with renal colic, as no stones were detected or passed and the slugs of Dilaudid shut me up each time. After experiencing this lance of burning pain in the region for literally months—awful enough to laugh right through the medicine that I have in my system for the nerve damage from my cancer—I finally called in an elective surgery. The CT hadn’t shown acute appendicitis while I had been wheeled in there after another extended episode of that pain, but the removed appendix was all covered in fibrotic necrosis; indicative of chronic appendicitis. If I’d not already been suffering from severe abdominal pain I maybe would’ve attributed that to the appendix sooner.

I’m surprised that you recovered so quickly. My surgery was arthroscopic yet I had bruising in my lower GI from it, and some odd pains in my guts which were non specific but the more external trauma did heal up very quickly. Like you, when I awoke from general the tell was that the impaled-on a-burning-lance sensation had simply been shut off. Evil little organs, those appendii.

Plot twist: my new oncologist just had me do CT/w contrast again, just this past week to rule out stones again and of course to screen for metastases. The radiology notes on the 3D reconstruction are “unremarkable, etc” until it gets to the appendix, which appears to have been surgically removed. Well yeah…