Making
Surgery Safer
(continued)
"You cut
the misery to the patient by at least two-thirds," adds Goodnight.
"You get the same results without bruising the ribs and the
muscles. It's a big, big advance for the patient."
Sackett underwent
the surgery after a short course of chemotherapy and radiation to
kill any cancer cells that might have escaped the throat region.
He had his surgery a month later. Four days after the operation
he left the hospital. He was able to walk a mile the next day. "I
didn't feel any pain, and my coloring came right back," he
recalls.
In subsequent
check ups, Sackett has been cancer free; the lymph nodes in his
stomach were similarly clear. Meanwhile, he has resumed a normal
diet, although he eats several small meals a day instead of three
large ones. "I can't eat big meals any more, which is probably
good, because I can eat like a pig," he says. "My little
tubby tummy is gone."
Sackett finally
opted to stop working - because of his heart, he says, not cancer
- and looks forward to enjoying his retirement healthy and cancer-free.
"I'm lucky
I could go to UC Davis Medical Center. The people there have been
a magnificent resource for me," says Sackett.
"I wonder
what challenge is next for me to overcome?"
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