Hi, I am sorry to hear about what you have gone through. It is definitely not common! I have had three liver biopsies all with no major side effects or problems. The only problem I had was that the last one they had to go in twice instead of once because they did not get enough tissue the first time (which I understand is fairly common) and that it hurt going in the third time. Hope you have better luck in the future. God Bless- Tanya
Hi there,
I’m very familiar with both hospitals; I live east of Sacramento, and have taken a number of patients to the liver center at UCD.
Sorry you had such poor experiences; what a shame. They generally watch the patient for several hours, until they are fairly sure they have no complications. I had a U/S guided biopsy in 2005 with the local hospital here, and had no complications. You apparently slipped through the cracks; this highlights the fact that biopsy is an invasive procedure with significant risk. Thanks for posting your experience for others to review.
Best of luck to you going forward,
Bill
Wow, I am so impressed with the immediate responses. I have never "posted" anything before. You are all VERY kind people for sharing. I wish all of you much health and happiness! Thank you, XO
Ive had two biopsies. First one in 1985 with my gastroenterologist- went very smoothly- just had to lay on my side at that time it was for 8 hours.
My 2nd biopsy was 2007 went smoothy also...radiologist performed the procedure..then I remained in recovery for 5 hours on my side.
I hope all goes better for you- Wish you well.
Charm27
You may have a malpratice lawsuit here,they should have NEVER let you take any kind of trasit right after the operation,the shock and bumps from the ride will cause your liver to bleed hemmorage,my doc told me to at least wait 4-6 hours afetr the BX before i did anything
I had two liver biopsies. The first, in 1992, was done by an experienced gastroenterologist. It couldn't have gone smoother. Lay on my side for a couple hours after the procedure and home in a taxi that afternoon. No heavy lifting for a few days and no problems. The second was done by a different gastro in 2001. He missed my liver twice and then spent an hour running around the hospital telling everyone how it wasn't his fault. The next day a radiologist did an ultrasound guided procedure - no problems. If at all possible, have your biopsy done with ultrasound guidance.
SAVE~ represents the year I was saved from a major car accident in 1987 after going off an embankment on my way to work with a tire blow out. I flew out of my car and my car hit me. I was SAVED at 28 years old with a blood transfusion (quite a few sacks) then re-operated on in 1988 with another blood transfusion.
KILL~during my biopsy, I was sent home to die! That is how I feel. An UN-considerate, not one of a "normal doctor" sent me home with a liver hematoma. Thank God I had great medical help and a lot of prayers and positive attitude from there.
SURVIVE~after 1 1/2 years of pain, tears, skinny, malnutrition, pain medications and NO life (not my normal out and about energetic self) I am excited to make it through the Hep-C treatments and I will SURVIVE!
My understading is that the chances of complications from a liver biopsy are aprox. 1 in 5,000. A case like yours is even more rare. Most patients are monitored closely enough to prevent the complications you describe from compounding one after another. No, you shouldn't have been sent home if you were complaining of pain. One in 5,000 is probably rare enough for some hospitals or doctors to become complacent, but I find it unusual to occur somewhere like Stanford. I'm also amazed that you would be transported as far as Davis from San Ramon. I'm sorry for your pain and hope you reach a full recovery.