The first 48 hours

  • Pain is expected — typically well-controlled with non-opioid medications (Tylenol + ibuprofen) plus a small amount of stronger medication for the first day or two if needed.
  • Nausea is common after anesthesia and usually resolves within the first day. Eat lightly, sip fluids, and rest.
  • Walk early and often. Even short laps around the house several times a day prevent blood clots and pneumonia.
  • Do not drive until you are off opioid medication and feel sharp enough to react quickly. Usually one week.
  • Constipation is almost universal after surgery — start a stool softener on day one.

Catheter care (when you have one)

  • Clean around the catheter twice a day with mild soap and water.
  • Keep the drainage bag below the level of your bladder at all times.
  • The "night bag" (larger, for sleeping) is for sleeping. The "leg bag" (smaller, strapped to the thigh) is for the day.
  • Some leakage of urine around the catheter, especially when you have a bowel movement, is normal and not a problem.
  • Bright red blood occasionally is normal. Continuous bright red blood, or thick clots, is not — refer to your discharge instructions for next steps.

Wound care

  • Small steri-strips or surgical glue covers the incisions. Leave them alone — they fall off on their own.
  • You may shower 24 hours after surgery. Let water run over the incisions, pat dry, do not scrub.
  • No baths, hot tubs, swimming pools, or oceans for two weeks.
  • Mild bruising, swelling, and tenderness around incisions is normal.

What is and is not normal

Your printed discharge instructions are the source of truth for what to expect, what warrants a call, and how to reach the team for your specific operation. As a general reference, here is what is typically normal — and what is a true emergency.

Normal

  • Mild swelling and bruising at incision sites
  • Constipation for a few days
  • Reduced appetite
  • Mood dips, fatigue, and disrupted sleep — anesthesia and surgery affect all of these
  • Occasional small amounts of blood in the urine
  • Pulling, stretching, or "tugging" sensations around the surgical area

Emergencies — call 911 (or go to the nearest ER)

  • Chest pain
  • Shortness of breath, especially of sudden onset
  • Fainting
  • Heavy, uncontrolled bleeding

Return to activity — general guide

Specific operations vary; this is the general pattern:

  • Walking: day of surgery
  • Driving: when off opioid medication, usually one week
  • Desk work: 1–2 weeks
  • Lifting over 15 lbs: 4 weeks
  • Heavy physical work or running: 4–6 weeks
  • Sex: 4 weeks for most operations; 6 weeks after robotic prostatectomy
  • Air travel: usually fine after one week for short flights, longer for long-haul