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Your doctor will provide ongoing management of your Enterra™ Therapy.
During your recovery, follow your doctor's advice. Avoid heavy lifting or activities that involve excessive or repetitive bending, twisting, bouncing, or stretching. These movements could damage or displace your leads or affect the neurostimulator's ability to provide stimulation.
You should not feel the stimulation. Call your doctor if symptoms return or if you have new or unusual abdominal pain, cramping, nausea, or vomiting, as these symptoms may indicate a problem with your implanted system.
It is normal to have some pain at the site for up to 6 weeks after the surgery. Your doctor will help you manage any pain if it becomes severe.
To maintain the most effective control of your symptoms, your doctor usually can adjust neurostimulator settings during an in-office programming session.
Your doctor will schedule follow-up visits to monitor your progress. A typical follow-up schedule may include office visits at 1 week after surgery; 1, 3, and 6 months after the surgery; and as needed after that. Be sure to keep these follow-up appointments since they provide opportunities for therapy assessment and system adjustments if necessary.
Tell your doctor if your address changes. If you change doctors, be sure to have your medical history sent to the new doctor. Always carry your device registration card with you and make a copy of the card for each of your health care providers (doctors, dentists, physical therapists, nurse practitioners, etc.). Call the Medtronic device registry if your address or physician changes.
Often a combination of treatments is necessary to control symptoms of gastroparesis*. Your gastroenterologist, endocrinologist, or primary care doctor will provide ongoing management of your condition and will prescribe any additional therapies you may need.
You should receive a list of recommended diet and nutrition tips. Also, be sure to strictly follow any specialized diet your doctor has recommended for you.
You will receive a patient manual and temporary registration card that come in the neurostimulator package before you leave the hospital. Please read the manual and carry the registration card with you until you receive the permanent card in the mail.
Gastric electrical stimulation is intended to reduce symptoms of chronic, drug-refractory nausea and vomiting associated with gastroparesis of idiopathic or diabetic origin.
However, gastric electrical stimulation is not a cure. Although not all patients will benefit from gastric electrical stimulation, for those that do, the rate of improvement will vary from person to person. Effectiveness of the Enterra neurostimulator for this use has not been demonstrated.
Always contact your doctor with questions you have about your therapy, medications, physical activity, recommended diet, follow-up visits, and other concerns.
Call your doctor if you are not experiencing the same symptoms of relief from the therapy you experienced previously. If you have a flare-up of symptoms, do not be alarmed and call your doctor if:
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Information on this site should not be used as a substitute for talking with your doctor. Always talk with your doctor about diagnosis and treatment information.