It is recommended to go to the hospital for another check-up! It may be other diseases, or it may be a misdiagnosis! After a patient's surgery, many family members are often eager to provide him with nutrition, hoping that the patient can recover quickly. However, after the operation, the patient's digestive function is weakened. If he eats too early or takes excessive supplements, it will be counterproductive. Due to the effects of anesthesia and the disease itself, the patient's digestive function will have certain obstacles after surgery, and the patient will not be able to digest food and absorb nutrients well. Therefore, patients should not eat too early after surgery. Patients undergoing non-digestive tract surgery generally start eating a normal diet 6 hours after surgery. For gastrointestinal surgery, the decision should be made based on the type of surgery and the condition of anal exhaust. After anal exhaust, start drinking a small amount of water. If there is no discomfort, you can eat liquid food (rice soup, vegetable soup, etc.), and then gradually transition to semi-liquid food (noodles, rice noodles, etc.), soft food, and regular food. Each meal should not be overly full. It is also not advisable to drink milk too early, as milk is cold in nature and can easily cause flatulence. Postoperative patients should eat nutritious and easy-to-digest foods. For the elderly and infirm, the time for eating liquid and semi-liquid food should be appropriately extended to facilitate digestion. For ordinary patients, after their condition stabilizes and improves, they can be given a normal diet. Patients usually eat sweets when taking liquid food, such as lotus root powder, orange juice, etc. However, there are also patients who are anorexic because they are not used to sweets, and even suffer from nausea and vomiting, which obviously affects their health. At this time, if lean meat or fresh fish can be appropriately used to make soup, it can not only ensure nutrition but also increase appetite, and the patient will recover quickly. The patient's diet should not be too precise. After surgery, patients often focus on a high-protein, high-calorie diet and neglect vitamin intake. The body's repair requires various nutrients, especially crude fiber foods. For patients who are bedridden after surgery, foods containing crude fiber can promote gastrointestinal activity and keep stools smooth. Therefore, a certain amount of vegetables should be included in the diet, especially green leafy vegetables. 1. Patients with chronic appendicitis should pay attention to avoid excessive fatigue in daily life, ensure adequate sleep and be mentally comfortable, because this can avoid the body's resistance from lowering and causing recurrence of the disease. 2. Pay attention to keeping the stool unobstructed. Patients with constipation tendencies should adjust their diet and other aspects, and can perform abdominal massage by themselves. Those whose condition is not easy to change can try taking laxative drugs, such as Maziren pills, laxatives, Guodao, and senna leaves. Wait, or use Kaiserlu. But this is only a temporary measure and cannot be relied upon in the long term. 3. Patients with chronic appendicitis should keep a light diet and eat more fiber-rich foods to keep their stools smooth. Generally speaking, warm animal meat such as sheep, beef, and dog meat should be consumed in moderation, and it is not advisable to eat too much onions, ginger, garlic, and peppers. You can choose to eat foods that have the effect of clearing away heat, detoxifying and promoting dampness, such as mung beans, bean sprouts, bitter melon, etc. Dietary taboos after appendicitis surgery. Gastrointestinal and abdominal surgeries are closely related to dietary taboos and must be taken seriously. 1. The intake of any food is taboo. After major surgery on the digestive tract and abdomen, the intestines are in a low-function state and fasting is required. 2-3 days after the operation, if the anus is exhausted, it indicates that the intestinal function has begun to recover, and a small amount of liquid diet can be given at this time. After 5-6 days, you can switch to a low-residue, semi-liquid diet. During this period, the liquid should be light and nutritious, and should be taken warm to avoid bringing in coarse food residues into the liquid. When switching to a low-residue semi-liquid diet, avoid eating soups with chicken, ham and various vegetables. Even if these foods have been cooked thoroughly, they must wait until 10 days after the operation before giving them as appropriate. 2. Avoid greasy food Even on the 10th day after surgery, when the body can tolerate soft meals, you should not eat greasy food too early. 3. Avoid hair growth. Two weeks after the operation, although the recovery is good and the stitches have been removed, the body's resistance is still very weak during this period, and the risk of inflammation still exists, so hair growth must be contraindicated. Digestive tract and abdominal surgeries include surgeries on the esophagus, stomach, intestines, liver, and gallbladder. However, some minor surgeries, such as appendicitis surgery, only require fasting for one day after the operation. Liquid food can be given on the second day, and semi-liquid food can be given on the third day. Soft rice can be given on the fifth day; for anorectal surgery, the patient must fast for 2-3 days, and then be given clear liquid and semi-liquid with less residue. Limit foods containing crude fiber in the diet, such as celery, Chinese cabbage, coriander, garlic sprouts, leeks, Chinese toon, winter bamboo shoots, hairy bamboo shoots, pineapple, etc., to reduce the frequency of bowel movements and the friction of undigested crude fiber on wounds; oral and throat During surgery, fasting should be avoided within 6 hours after surgery, and hot fluids should be fasted within 1-2 days. Cold fluids should be the mainstay.