Tonsillectomy Recovery Day 11 and Beyond

Tonsillectomy Recovery after Day Eleven

 

At some point I hope to add pages for day 12, day 13, day 14, day 15, day 16, and another page for days 17,18,19, and 20.  For now, please share your tonsillectomy recovery experiences here.  I wish you the very best of health!



  1. ty
    Hey. Its me again. Had the surgery last week and OMG! The worst days of my life. I will make it but geeze!! This sucks bad. I had to read your comments again because I began to get depressed, lol. Im driving my husband and doctor crazy by keep asking them how long will this last. Its good hearing from someone that understands the process and pain. Your experiences are helping me through girl. Thanks again:)

    1. Kate
      Horrible flashbacks reading your message Ty! I have just returned from a business trip, meeting lots of new people, and I didn’t have to worry about my breath: so liberating and confidence building. I discovered that one of my colleagues had her tonsils removed 2 years ago – when I happened to mention that I was just a few weeks on from my operation, she gave me a big bear hug because she could empathise with my more recent experience. You WILL eat, sleep and enjoy life again – I promise! Stay positive: you made the right decision.

  2. Kate
    I am now four weeks post surgery (in the UK), and life is good! I had a tonsillectomy due to tonsil stones (I had small, pitted tonsils, and was unable to remove the stones myself, whatever method I tried) – private medical insurance and a past history of throat infections helped get me the surgery. I knew it was a drastic option, but I was prepared to do ANYTHING to solve my bad breath problems. I did nearly cancel when I read this forum the day before surgery though! But I didn’t, and I survived, and my tonsil stones and bad breath are finally GONE!Having found this forum so much help during the dark days post-surgery, I wanted to share my experience/what helped me. If you are about to have surgery, or are still in recovery, I can promise you it will get SO much better in a few days – hang in there!1. Don’t plan ANYTHING for the two weeks post surgery – and make sure you book at least two weeks off work. Days 5 – 8 were the worst for me, although in total I had about 10 days of constant pain/medication and sleep deprivation.
    2. I cried A LOT on day one – a mixture of the anesthesia/trauma, relief at getting through surgery, and pain! I had one night in hospital.
    3. Sucking on crushed ice helps a lot – make sure you have some in stock. I did not use a humidifier – we didn’t want to pump damp air into our bedroom!
    4. Take as much pain medication as you can – I used Tramadol, ibuprofen and paracetamol – you will not get addicted, and you WILL need them. But keep a drug diary so you can recall what drugs you took and when – you will not remember!
    5. Sleeping with my face/throat on a hot water bottle helped me a lot in days 5+: your throat muscles tighten up in response to the surgery, and I think this helped relax me a little
    6. The nights were the worst, as I would wake up in a lot of pain and then struggle to swallow more medication/get back to sleep. Listening to the radio really helped get me through the dark, lonely hours. My husband moved into the spare bed for the first 10 days, to ensure he could get some sleep and I could thrash around the bed as much as I needed to get comfortable!
    7. In the UK we are advised to eat rough food e.g. toast when we can. I did manage this a couple of times, but I mostly lived on soup (no bread!), fish in sauce (you can buy this frozen in handy microwaveable pouches), yogurt, porridge and hot chocolate. I tried making smoothies but the fruit was too acidic and hurt my throat. There were a couple of days when I could not face eating anything due to the pain. I did not get constipated, and I did not lose much weight – because I spent two weeks resting, and most of what I DID eat was high calorie!
    8. You will be too tired to read much – have a good set of DVDs on standby
    9. I did not have any bleeding. I felt so ill that completely resting in the first week was an easy option – and I made sure I had someone on call in the first few days, just in case
    10. I was able to speak on all days, although about half an hour of conversation was enough
    11. I went for my first short walk one week after surgery. Four weeks on, I am now exercising as normal – running, swimming and pilates.
    12. I stopped regular pain relief on about day 15, having gradually cut down on what I was taking.
    13. I gradually re-introduced different types of food after two weeks. I still have a sticky feeling in the back of my throat, which I expect to disappear over the coming weeks.My tonsillectomy recovery was the worst 10 days of my life. But ridding myself of tonsil stones is one of the best things I ever did!

    1. Ty
      Thank you for sharing. I also have tonsil stones and thought I may be going to far getting surgery to remove them. I’m a married woman and nothing’s is more damaging to a marriage than insecurity. TMI, I know just wanted to say thanks for sharing your experience. I’m going forwadr with the surgery.

      1. Kate
        I am also married (and 47 – forgot that bit!) and would not even discuss the problem with my husband. So I feel your insecurity! It will hurt a lot – stay focused on the goal and remember that in a few days you will be much better, and also liberated!

  3. Ellen Howard
    Day 9 of my recovery.I’m not sure how relevant this will be to anyone because I’m not entirely sure how common it is. I’m just turned 18 and have been having a lot of problems with my tonsils for the best part of three years. One thing I always found when digging out those god awful tonsil stones was that my tonsils were extremely prone to bleeding – something my ENT surgeon also found out on the day of the op!He said no one in his experience had bled that much in a tonsillectomy procedure in years. I had to be stitched right up on my right side and let me tell you, we all know how sore recovery is without stitches right? Imagine being wheeled out of theatre with those bad boys in you. It’s been sore, for the first few days it was the actual space at the top of the back of my throat that was painful and white and scabby. I was throwing up old blood so frequently (and a lot of it might I add) that I couldnt keep anything down; not food, not painkillers. It was awful.But I powered through and ate as much as I could, despite the pain, because I thought ‘you know what I’ve put up with enough sh*t from my tonsils this time I’m gonna show ‘em what I’m made of!’ And after about day three or four the pain subsided from my tonsil bed area and is now a horrible stingy/achy feeling further down my throat, which apparently is due to the whole stitching procedure, I guess a lot of tubes were bumped around in this process and it’s seriously bruised me inside. I find the pain really hits me at night and I’m starting to get severe earaches to accompany that, which is nice! My co-codamol painkillers ran out days ago so I’m going strong on paracetamol and Diclofenac.

    I hope everyone else is managing to power through! Just think of all the tonsillitus and nasty tonsil stones that you’re gonna get to avoid for the rest of your life! Remember, at most this recovery process is going to take 17-20 days, which in perspective, is more than worth it to be tonsil free!

    Stay safe xxx

  4. Lindsey
    I am a 24 year old female, I had my tonsils removed on July 23. I had my tonsils removed due to horrid tonsil stones. Let me start off by saying DRINK WATER NO MATTER HOW BAD IT HURTS!!!! Day 1: after procedure you’re so loopy from meds it flys by. I was offered a blue slushing and teddy Graham’s. 8 bags of teddy Graham’s later I am ready to keave!! After surgery I even had McDonald’s I don’t even remember eating it. Throat was numb all day long. I received percocet 5mg. All you will want to do is sleep. Have someone wake you up to drink and take meds!!Day 2: pain was still tolerable I started taking the pain medication every 4 hours so the pain doesn’t get out of control. I was eating mash potatoes ( the pre made bob Evans kind was the smoothest), I noticed ice cold water stung my throat so room temperature worked. I was drinking every 20 mins to keep the throat moist. Sleeping was horrible, I ended up sleeping on couch so my head would be propped up. Waking up every 45 mins to sip water, you get no sleep at all. I didn’t want my throat to dry out because it is so painful. I set my alarm every 4 hours so I would take my medicine.Day 3,4,5: Worst days ever! Extreme pain 10/10, that pain medicine didn’t help! Ear pain started kicking in. I had ice constantly on my throat to keep swelling down. Scabs were formed in back of throat very thick. Drinking water was a task. Everytime I swallowed felt like razorblades. I had to force myself to eat. Ended up getting a blood clot on my left tonsil on day5 and started bleeding. On call dr told me to drink ice cold water and it helped. Woke up after and blood clot resolved on its own. I was having mini hot flashes all day.Day 6: I felt like a new person. Pain was a 6/10. I was eating drinking taking my neds around the clock

    Day 7,8,9: scabs started falling off day 7. It feels like something is caught in back of throat when them fall off. Throat is very sensitive after they fall off that any liquid or food stings the throat. I have bumped my meds down to 1 pill every 4 hours instead of 2 pills. Sleeping longer through the night.

    Day 10 and on: pain has started to be controlled with Motrin. I feel 100% better!! I am starting to eat solid foods. I had PBJ sandwhich and it was easy to go down. I feel back to my normal self. Throat still hurts but just like it would as a sore throat.

    I think keeping myself hydrated non stopped helped with my speedy recovery. I go back to wk in a few days and feel comfortable going back. I still have to drink water so throat doesn’t get dry. My scabs are 75% gone. I’ve had someone with me the whole time and you DO need that. Milk never seemed to cause the phlegm in my throat as others posted. It soothed the burning. I lived off mash potatoes and chick n star soup mix for the first days. Keep taking medication when it’s due so pain stays under control!! Take the full two weeks off dr reccomends because you will need it. I would do this surgery again knowing it is going to cure my tonsil stones and stinky breath! Sorry this blog is all over the place my mind is going crazy! I hope everyone as a good recovery as well as I’ve had!

Check out our new tonsillectomy recovery video- Caution: Not always pretty

A collection of various experiences of adult tonsillectomy patients after their tenth day of tonsillectomy recovery
From thousands of post comments to the tonsillectomy recovery forum, I am assembling a sampling of various accounts and impressions of tonsillectomy recovery for each day. Below I share comments about tonsillectomy recovery after day 11. These comments are from tonsillectomy patients who were kind enough to share their experiences to help others as they navigate the bumpy road of tonsillectomy recovery.

 

Many will experience depression toward the end of of their tonsillectomy recovery.

Depression after tonsillectomy
Depression After Tonsillectomy?

-Greg Tooke 

343 comments

  1. Beginning day 11 post op. Had tonsils, adenoids and a small tumor removed from my throat behind one of the tonsils.
    41 male and this has been the most challenging experience physically and mentally thus far throughout my life..
    The fortunate part: I had no major complications such as bleeding or vomiting.
    The unfortunate part: when will this end?
    I feel as though I take a step forward only to find myself two steps back in the recovery process.
    For me the pain has been intense and consistent from waking up out of surgery. Managing pain with the prescribed medications ( Hydrocodone and Ibuprofen rotated every three hours) has done very little. The pain has increased into my jaw, ears and as of day 8, the absolute worst headaches I’ve ever experienced. The headaches are debilitating. It is nearly impossible to function for any amount of time
    and I find myself dozing off randomly for 15-20 minutes because I have not been able to get more than about 3-4 hours of sleep in per night.
    In all fairness my surgeon was honest and upfront about the procedure and recovery. He told me I would probably hate him for 1 month, be on light speaking terms after 3, and would thank him after 1 year..! I remember laughing and thinking to myself “wow.. can’t be THAT bad”..
    WRONG! It is! As of now I have mostly very thin scabs remaining.. my uvula is still swollen even after 1 week of steroids, and I am still unable to exhaul out of my nose because the swelling has the airway blocked. Significant scabs remain on the back of my uvula.
    All liquid and food is painful. Cold is no longer a comfort as the new skin is hyper sensitive. Everything has to be room temperature. I still haven’t “learned” how to swallow again without 1/3 of everything going up my nose. I slowly let myself become de-hydrated (headaches) and after two days of constant drinking I have finally gotten that back under control.
    My biggest struggle at this point are the headaches and referred pain to the ears and jaw… I have had to ice down my neck and head to keep my temperature under control. There are no obvious signs of infection. Just a new twist to my ever changing post op recovery symptoms.
    I have a follow up appointment in two days which I am looking forward to… mostly to know where I stand.
    I am supposed to go back to work in one day and am worried about how that will pan out as I am still taking heavy doses of pain medications and would have a 40 mile commute each way..
    I know I’m rambling and probably sound a little pissy…lol.. but.. I have never been so exhausted nor in such discomfort.. so here I am.. at 2:45 AM typing for once instead of reading. This forum has helped me tremendously throughout MY recovery. So hopefully what I share will give at least one person hope that they are NOT a wuss. If I weren’t so dehydrated I probably would have cried a few times.
    My takeaways so far.
    1. Don’t expect a routine. Things change daily. One day a popsicle is great, the next its like glass shards.
    2. Drink water until you can’t possibly drink anymore then fill up your cup and repeat.
    3. If you get a spurt of energy, it’s just your mind teasing you.. do not plan on doing anything.. you will regret it later that evening and then following day.
    4. Sleep when you can. Because as soon as you doze off it’s time to take medicine and the prepearation to do so requires a fair amount of time awake.
    5. Ask for Lidocaine Loly-pops. I had them on days 1-4. Luckily a friend of mine mixed up a lidocaine gel concoction for me to gargle. Without that Inwould have requested to be voluntarily induced into a coma..
    6. Plan for time off. Probably twice as long as you think as an adult having this procedure.
    7. Post here. What else are we to do with our time but read these and measure ourselves against other’s recovery stories? Menatally it helps. Plus..it helps family, friends and co-workers gain some insight into your world as a recovering victim.. lol
    8. Eat whatever you want. It all hurts. Might as well have something nutritious if you’re gonna suffer. Just lay off the pointy/jagged stuff for a while.. but seriously… I got so tired of won-ton soup I finally broke down and had a burger…. hurt equally. But man did I FEEL like I had acxomplished something!
    Good luck and happy recovery.

    1. Bryce, I couldn’t agree more with EVERYTHING you’ve said!
      I gotthe burst of energy on day 10, and boy have I paid for it today! I’ve not got out of bed!!
      I thought it was in my head about cold things but I too can’t tolerate, whereas last week a slush was my best friend!
      Hang in there everyone, things can only get better!! Or so I keep telling myself!! ?

    2. Thanks for sharing. I felt exactly the same; I am 45 yrs old. First day after surgery, I did not feel any pain at all so I thought I was one of the rare lucky ones. That all changed from day two to yesterday (my 10th day).
      Man I do not think I will ever experience that much pain ever again in my life (certainly up to the point of surgery, had never been sooo helplessly in pain) I started off on 4 strong painkillers and antibiotics and am now down to 1 strong one that I am alternating every 4 hrs with panadols. The jaw and ear pain are now currently the main culprits, swallowing is still painful and hoping that tomorrow and the day after will be better as I am scheduled to go back to work in a few days time.
      Still praying for this pain to totally disappear and be normal again. My little boy has been my pillar of strength – he has not left my side (except the times he is at school) since I was discharged 10 days ago- bless him.

    3. Everything here is true for me! It been the worst 8 days of my life – today is a better day in comparison

      Thanks for the post – mine didn’t make sense because of the amount of morphine I was taking

  2. Day 10 and 11 feel pretty much the same. Still throat pain when drinking and eating, a tiny bit of ear pain at times. Yesterday (day 10) I actually managed to eat a proper meal!! 🙂 I still wouldn’t recommend it if your scabs are still visible. I will be back to blended food today again just to be on the safe side. I would say about 70% of my scabs have dissolved.

    Also another thing I’ve noticed, I’m getting a bit more nausea in the mornings and a weird taste in my mouth throughout the day. I hope this is only temporary.

  3. Thank God I’m over the worst day 11 for me I must say it wasn’t as bad as everyone writes about it it is painful but with the meds helped spot I was on Tylenol with codine n ibuprofen helped untile day 6 but day 1 threw 3 just felt like a bad sore throat couldn’t eat just had ice water n ice chips day 4 finally ate soup day 5 still in pain then day 6 was the worst I started to bleed freaked my self out my mouth wouldn’t stop filling up felt like a secen from a horror movie after 20 min n a trip to the er it stoped but lottery everyday since then I’ve had a lol bleeding nothing like day 6 tho day 9 10 u can just feel ur self feeling more better everyday Im able to swallow eat solids but it’s still uncountable feeling tho since day 6 I’ve had a cough that so annoying keeps me up all night I think that’s what causes my bleeding I’m not on no pain meds anyone my uvula is swollen still I can feel it best tip ever my Dr told me and he was right DRINk LOTS OF WATER!!! And swallow the more u do this the faster the recover another tip I wish I would of done from the top ask for Percocets I honestly felt sucha relief when ur in pain I could eat drink I lost about 11 pounds threw these 11 days still not healed all the way few more days in I hope to be able to sleep threw the night n feel no discomfort ….good luck!

  4. This blog haa been my hero. I know a handful of people who said getting goir tonsils removed is a walk in the park and i thought i was being a massive wimp.
    day 1 surgery at 9 discharged at 2.30
    after eating a yogurt in hospital. Felt fine until the painkillers they give you stops working and i was in agony.
    day 2 cant drink,eat or sleep and went to doctors to see if i can get some stronger painkillers they sent me to hospital and was put on iv fluid aand morphine and said i had to eat and drink or my mouth will not get better. They were right the more you drink the easier it get but its a continuous pain in the throat, ear and jaw. I coudnt open my mouth and was put on antibiotics and give codeine, paracetamol and naproxen. I ate when i got home but was sick.
    day 3 alarms set on phone every 4 hours to take painkillers but even through the night im waking in pain as they are wearing off. ice pack on jaw helps and the night and morning is the worst part of the day. Eating 1 slice of toast is taking an hour.
    day 4 went for a walk and found fresh air helped. ok it was only to a lake but felt better for not lying on the sofa feeling sorry for myself
    day 5 painkiller are running out and still having to take them religiously. Feeeling depressed now just want a decent sleep and to be able to eat properly. keep crying especially when eating. it feels like a tablets stuck at the back of my throat. people keep saying about scabs falling off but just feel like a tearing sensation, guessing thats me eating my own dead skin…nice!
    day 6 back to doctors for more painkillers, she doesnt think i should be as bad as i am so given me more painkillers and laxido as still not been to the toilet and a iron supplement and she thinks i could have anaemia. im going back to her on day 10.
    day 6,7,8,9 its getting better its not normal yet but im eating a meal without swallowing water after every bite. Im not waking up as much in the night to take painkillers and not taking them religiously through the day. thw cough is gone. my voice isnt back yet i sould like a death person but its improved loads. its worth it and i wouldnt of said that a week ago. to not get glandular fever and constant sore throats and throat infections.
    day 10 off to doctors today and back to work on day 15. excited to get back to reality.

  5. Day 11 post op and can finally see light at end of the tunnel. Im 36 and had constant tonsilitis and abscesses. Also caused head to toe rash that lasted 3 months a time so they had to come out. The surgeon said they were in such a bad state he had to cut away scar tissue aswell. First few days were unpleasent but with broken sleep and STRONG medication i got through. Then day 5 and 6 were hell. I honestly thought the pain couldnt get any worse. I was wrong. Day 7 was the worst ive ever felt. Migrane fever earache jawache and bad throat. Couldnt sleep couldnt even sip water. Terrible. After that day by day it has improved slowly. I managed to eat a whole bowl of soup last night which is the 1st proper food in well over a week.
    Once tou pass the worst of it it does gwt better but i feel i was not made clear before surgery how bad recovery is.

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