Hi C.! Here's another mother's exp about 4 months ago with her 3 yr old's T&A as well as my own experience about the same time at 29:
Nicole did fine with the surgery. They gave her something that made her falling down drunk. She was literally falling on her face. I had to hold her down while they put in the IV but once it was in she was fine with it. Just playing with it, curious. The surgery didn't take long at all. It was longer waiting for her to come out of recovery. Then we had to wait for her to eat and pee before we could leave. She insisted on walking out to the car dragging her suitcase behind her. She has been doing well except she doesn't like the hydrocodone, so I've been mixing it with cherry flavored tylenol and she takes it better. So far she only wants to eat pancakes with syrup and chocolate milk. Other than a little bit of constipation she seems to be doing fine.
mine:
I got Loritab so the first week was not as bad as the subsequent weeks. I also got some $5/apiece suckers that numb your throat....they were incredibly bitter but worked well. Try some of those if your ENT will prescribe them. My understanding is that children don't get anything for pain, however.
The thing that helped me the most was LOTS of water (I drank 6 liters a day) and LOTS of jello. However, I got scurvy because ALL I ate was jello so I would definitely recommend forcing down cold chicken broth like they recommend. The other thing that I started eating at first was pureed soups. Stay away from anything with a tomato base tho. The portabello mushroom was great. Cream of broc and cheese and cream of potato were great. I ate alot of applesauce but while it felt good cold, the acidity of it stung a bit. Also, yogurt burned too.
I couldn't eat ice cream or popsicles because the pain was multiplied intensely while my throat was "thawing out" once I was done. It had me crying.
Also, I stayed in bed the first week (mostly because of the Loritab) and ended up getting pneumonia. I'd let her stay in bed as much as she wants, but get her up 2-4 times a day for walks around the house.
She HAS to be propped up at all times while in bed and can't sleep lying down. My throat was swollen and would start to swell shut, then it took several weeks before my tongue learned to not fall into my throat, cutting off my airway.
Expect her to have THE MOST WRETCHED breath in the entire world for several weeks. It could knock over a mule. It's due to the rotting scabs.
I also got thrush due to the oral antibiotics. You may want to ask your ENT and see if there's a way to avoid that.
Expect her to have bad gas. One usually does after surgery. Part of it is passing the general anesthesia out of your body.
She will probably vomit at least once. My understanding is that children tend to vomit more....Perhaps you can get some phernergan suppositories? That would help her sleep alot too.
I also took tons of cherry Tylenol suspension after the Loritab ran out. DO NOT give her motrin or anything else. Tylenol;s the only thing you can take - everything else poses a hazard of bleeding.
One last thing: dairy thickens mucus and since one's throat has been sliced and diced, if you have any drainage it will be VERY difficult to get out. Not only will it be painful but your muscles have to be retrained so it can be kinda scary until that happens. For that reason I strongly suggest you not give her anything with dairy for awhile - including pudding.
I've been told repeatedly that children heal faster than adults and I certainly hope that's true for you. The kids at church I've talked to that have had this done have been 100% at 3 weeks. The first week was hell, the second week was worse (days 8-10 are especially bad), the beginning of the third week was bearable in terms of a normal schedule, and by then end of it they all felt like their normal selves. Most of them talked immediately after the surgery adn lived to regret it mightily the next day. Most of them were talking ok by the beginning of second week. Remember that those are the days with the highest risk for bleeding tho.
ON top of everything, there is INCREDIBLE ear pain for several weeks too. You go from feeling like you have a minor ear infection to a horrible ear infection, but it's all related to the surgery.
If I think of anything else I'll let you know! Good luck!