Hi again, Jenni:
The latest report sounds good.
Judging from our collective post-op experiences, I believe that Brian is responding fairly normally, so far.
After my surgery, I couldn't get any food down for days, until a very determined ICU nurse said she wasn't leaving the room until I ate
something on my dish. It took a Herculean effort, but I did - and within another day, my long-lost appetite was back. We had quite a reunion. I was in ICU for 4 days, even though I was doing fine (walking the halls by Day 3). I found out that they didn't have a room for me and my surgeon didn't mind my remaining in the ICU, although, at over $5,000. per day, I doubt my insurance company liked it so much. Still, they paid. Doctors orders and all that.
Brian will be groggy for awhile but he'll come around. We all do - at a somewhat different pace - depending on the length of the surgery, the amount of anesthesia received and our own recuperative powers. I took about 2 full days to want to do more than sleep and rest. However, by Day 3, I was bored and began sitting in a chair, then, by Day 4, walking the halls (with my wife's help) then, with a PT nurse who evaluated my ability to navigate on stairs, etc before signing off on my release. I was officially released by noon of Day 5. I was still pretty drained when I got home but I came around within a few more days, although I still took naps (which I had never done previously). When two weeks had passed since my surgery, I pestered my neurosurgeon to give me permission to drive, again. He did and I never looked back, including driving 60-mile round-trips to and from the hospital where I received my 5-day-a-week FSR treatments (for 5 weeks) just three months later. No problem.
I can only speak for myself, of course, but even though I had a complication-free recovery, I feel I'm much better now, just about two full years post-surgery, than I was immediately after - or even two months after. It's a slow but deliberate healing process. Sort of like a scar that slowly but surely fades over time. With Brian's relative youth, general good health, positive attitude and his solid support system (you, Jenni) I think this is going to work out fine, even if he finds a few little 'bumps in the road' along the way, which I hope doesn't happen.
Thanks again for conscientiously posting the updates. I'm certain Brian will appreciate that as well as his 'family' that reads them with interest as they come in. As my (young adult) son might say:
"You rawk, Jenni!" Jim