June 2020
I’ve put it off for as long as possible because replacing a knee is major surgery, and things can go sideways fast. Infection is #1 on my doctor’s list of concerns. Blood clots are #2, and I’ve heard stories of people who had clots travel to their lungs and died before they could get to an emergency room.
Pain is at the top of my list. My knee is now bone on bone, and I can’t limp all the way around a grocery store without packing it in.
Walking gingerly into OSF St. Francis Hospital with the folded-up walker I’ll need later, I’m nervous because it’s the first year of the pandemic, in the time before the vaccine, and before anyone knows whether COVID can damage your organs. Hospitals are doing only necessary surgeries on patients who are healthy enough to go home the same day.
Sitting on the hospital bed, I slip on the gown the aide gives me, as well as yellow booties and adult Depends. A nurse comes by in her mask to go over the pre-op checklist and answer my questions: “How do they know what size knee to put in?…Do they ever use knees from cadavers?” An IV port is installed in the back of my hand, and then I wait, because the previous knee surgery is taking longer than expected. The nurse won’t tell me why.
Eventually, she says it’s time and walks slowly with me as I limp down the hallway. I’m resigned to whatever fate awaits me and unconcerned about the hospital gown exposing my backside, because I am rocking the Depends.
We enter a room with half-a-dozen people in masks. Each one is introduced by their first name, and my anxiety throttles down from 7 to 3. Their smiling eyes say, Don’t worry. We’re good at this. We’ve got you.
For months, people have been wearing protective masks that hide most of their faces, and I’ve noticed how many eyes are simply beautiful. They convey emotions that I wouldn’t have seen before, from humorous to indifferent to coy. Some people glance away as if making eye contact will spread the virus. Some eyes are mischievous with secrets. A few eyes look so weary or hold such sadness that I want to ask, “Are you okay?”
Sitting on the cool, grey metal table in the middle of the room, wondering if it’s going to be THE table, I’m thankful for the warm cushion of the Depends.
A big guy comes over, puts his hands on my shoulders and says that Kris is going to give me an injection in my lower back. I will feel a prick, and the big guy will catch me if I fall over, which I apparently do a moment later, because I wake up in recovery to Grace, who inquires how I’m feeling.
“I’m amused that I woke up to grace,” I say.
Before I can go home, I’m required to walk up two steps, which is easier than I anticipated, and I have to pass urine. Standing at the toilet, I can’t get anything to happen. My midsection is numb and has apparently gone on vacation, so whether I go or not doesn’t seem to be in my control. Yet, somewhere along the line, urine has appeared in the Depends. When I point this out to the nurse, she says, “You’re good to go,” which also amuses me, because I’m not sure I can.
At home I strap my knee into a portable ice cooler that circulates cold water and wear the cooler continuously for the next three weeks. I also begin a regimen of alternating pain medications every three hours, my wife getting up throughout the night to hand me the correct pill and put more ice in the machine.
Four days later I begin physical therapy with Luke, to restore flexibility and strength. One day he uses my knee as a convenient prop to describe the surgery to a student intern—how the surgeon vertically sliced through the skin over my knee here, flipped my kneecap to the side like this, sawed off bits of my leg bones above and below the knee, finagled the artificial knee into the space between the remaining bones, glued it in, resurfaced the kneecap, flipped it back, then stitched and stapled the two flaps of skin back together over it all.
Because of the drugs, I have little appetite and lose fifteen pounds. Every couple of days I tighten my belt another notch. By the end of the third week, not wanting to become addicted to the opioids, and weirded out by the strange dreams that appear every night and swirl like something from the Twilight Zone, I swap in Tylenol and ibuprofen.
In the seventh week of Zombieland, sleep is still a problem, because the lingering dull-bladed ache in my knee keeps waking me up. I doubt that I’ve had any REM sleep since surgery. I can’t entertain a thought long enough to figure out where it’s headed. My physical therapist suggests taking Aleve, and finally I can sleep.
In retrospect, even with the thrill of thinking that I was now a cyborg or bionic, it wasn’t a miracle that a living knee could be replaced with a contraption of plastic and metal–one that works so well that I can walk without pain for the first time in a decade. That was technology and the skills of the surgeons and nurses.
The miracle was this: In the early months of the pandemic, when it wasn’t known how the virus was being transmitted, and death counts were going up at a terrifying rate, these nurses and doctors turned toward people who were suffering and put their own lives on the line. They had to be concerned about their own health, and worried that they might bring something fatal home to their families. Yet they were there in the OR with me, and they were smiling. This kind of unselfish love can’t be explained.
The courage I saw in their eyes shines bright in the night sky of my heart.
14 thoughts on “The Wonder of Knees”
This is a lovely piece, Mark — told with your usual wit and kindness. You capture the importance of simple gestures of care. And it took me back to my experience with a broken femur!
It doesn’t take much to convey empathy, Liz. The essay was actually twice as long, but Pulse has a length restriction, so I had to edit the text down. I hope that whatever aftereffects you had from the broken bone have long since gone away and you never notice it.
Well done, Mark! Loved the beautiful eyes and waking up to Grace 🙂
Thank you, Miriam!
Mark,, how lovely. I travelled to Rwanda in 2021 when all were still masked, for a misison on cervical cancer prevention. I still remember all the eyes of the women in the clinics: a direct look, then a quick lift of the eyebrows: a very African female gesture but which translates as: “I see you”. It meant the world to me then,, as it might have to you at the time of your surgery.
Laura, what a lovely gesture they made! And you are right, it meant the world to me as I went into surgery. Thank you for sharing this!
Thank you so much for writing this piece. It is beautiful, heart-felt, endearing, and refreshing to read. As a physician who has worked in the hospital setting for many years, and especially in the intensive care unit during COVID, I appreciate your acknowledgment and sentiments toward those who cared for you in the hospital. Your words and comments have power. And those words prove to me and my fellow healthcare comrades that there is so much kindness in humanKIND. Thank you for sharing!
Even if patients never see the faces of the doctors and nurses taking care of them, especially in surgery and places like the ICU, those interactions have the power to reassure patients that they are being cared for as people and not as case numbers. The presence of empathy creates trust and helps patients to want to get better. I will never recognize the medical people who worked on me if we walk by each other on the street, but I will never forget how they took their time to take care of me, a stranger.
I’ve got a way to go yet, I guess. My recoup’s not going so well…
https://rlavalette.wordpress.com/2024/11/28/wheres-he-been/#comments
My recovery took a lot longer than I expected. I was walking three miles every morning before the surgery, but in the days after I could manage only 100 feet before the pain became too much. Gradually, with the help of a cane, I would walk a little further each day. But it took months to strengthen my repaired leg enough to go long distances. Going up and down stairs took longer. Now I am so thankful that I had it done.
“the miracle was this… they were there with me and they were smiling… that kind of unselfish love can’t be explained.”
This section brought tears to my eyes. So often our work and best efforts are not received with this much grace (and of course too often it ISN’T our best work and the patient isn’t at the center). To have our best side seen, that is also a miracle.
Thank you, and I hope your recovery was swift.
I hold such gratitude for nurses, Deborah, who are often overlooked but indispensable, first with my knee surgery and now with treatments for prostate cancer. They are the ones who listen to what is going on inside me beyond the medical details, and help me understand.
I love your article! I am 7 weeks post op left total knee. I did it before it became bad. Therapy is slow and HARD!
Recovery is both slow and hard, Maria. Slower and harder than I anticipated, and with more pain. That you had it done before it became bad should help shorten your recovery period, I would think. Still, all the muscles and nerves take their sweet time to coordinate together again.