summary & pictures

first, this write-up owes considerably to my primary caretaker, who has been with me day and night through the recovery process. I would not be able to be half as thorough if not for her incredibly detailed notes while I was incapacitated in the hospital and I would not be half as well & healthy if not for her patient & attentive care. I cannot adequately express my eternal gratitude to her.

second, I am including pictures of my reconstructed genitalia here and I’m not posting from an alt. if you’re not trans or, especially, if you know that you’re going to find these pictures arousing, I ask that you just not click these links. your curiosity about the procedure and process are better satisfied by this info document published by OHSU, which includes images that explain the process of reconstruction and depictions of what the resulting anatomy looks like. these graphical recovery pictures are included because there’s no comprehensive experience report from a trans person who has underwent this procedure by these surgeons online. pictures of the recovery process are critical for these experience reports but many of the trans women who post them, especially on reddit, report that posting these pictures leads to solicitation and sexual harassment in their inbox. I’m posting this here on hexbear mainly because I’m loathe to post this on reddit - fuck that place.

one month ago, I had Laparoscopic Peritoneal Vaginoplasty (LPV), sometimes called Peritoneal Pull-Through Vaginoplasty (PPT) in the trans community, with Dr. Geolani Dy and Dr. Blair Peters on 2021-12-08. Dr. Dy operated the robot that dissected my abdominal wall, pulling a flap of peritoneal skin down and shaping it into most of my vaginal canal, anchoring it to the shortened penile-scrotile skin tube that’s typical of the older Penile-Inversion Vaginoplasty (PIV) approach. Dr. Peters reconstructed my external genitalia, forming a vulva with labia major and minora out of scrotal and penile skin respectively, shaping the glans of my former penis into a clitoris, and forming a clit hood out of my foreskin. despite being only a month into the healing process, I am very happy with the aesthetics of my new vagina, so far, despite the still-prevalent swelling that makes it a bit hard to see what things will look like after they heal – you really only get a sense of this after staring at hundreds of surgical timelines. I’m considerably less happy with my care during the recovery. most of the problems I’ve had can be attributed to covid, the holidays, and staff shortages, but a couple are just poor care. especially trying, has been pain management – it’s left a lot to be desired, especially following such a major surgery. once out of the hospital, it became incredibly hard to actually get ahold of my doctors and, at times, I’ve felt abandoned.

with a bit more distance from the difficult and painful bits - especially as I, more and more, get to just experience my body, rectified of a problem that has been causing me incredible pain from birth – I’m able to say with certainty that I’m glad I underwent the procedure with the team at OHSU. I hope they’ll take my feedback in the spirit it’s intended - to reduce the suffering of future patients.

results

these photos are graphic, extremely NSFW - they include oozing, open wounds on top of the fact that they are obviously of my reconstructed genitalia.

  • immediately post-op, just prior to bandaging by the surgeons

    I’ll edit these in when the surgeon’s office sends them to me. they apparently can’t find any of my surgical photos.

  • 1 week post-op: 1

    I’m unbelievably swollen in this picture so I can’t actually pull my labia majora open to show the internal structure yet – pain, lack of tissue flexibility, and lack of space all stop me from doing that.

  • 3 week post-op: 1

    just including one picture from above here to show what the top structure of my labia minora and clitoral hood look like in 3D. that gets lost in the later pictures from head on. honestly, one of the best things for my dysphoria since the bandages came off has been to just touch the place where they all come together. that feels almost surreal.

  • 4.5 week post-op: 1, 2, 3

    the internal structure is well-visible here. first, there’s a lot of wound separation. I have more than is typical but it should all heal without issue. second, the pink mass in the middle is the urethral plate, not my clitoris. urethral tissue was used to line the inside of my labia minora and the entrance to my vaginal canal as I lacked adequate material to line it all with the inner lining of the penis. my clitoris is above the urethral plate, hidden by the clitoral hood and by a bunch of mucous-y discharge (the sticky, white stuff). I wish I had more prominent labia minora but that’s really my only aesthetic complaint at the moment.

surgery timeline

I began seeking surgery after changing my health insurance in summer 2020. I cleared insurance hurdles and received their approval to choose a surgeon in 1/2021. this didn’t come easily, though. they first tried to force me to get an orchiectomy prior to seeking a vaginoplasty for a while but suddenly dropped this. I later found out that the only reason they’d dropped this was another trans woman who was seeking surgery at the same time – she fought them tooth and nail to force them to do what they had to do and approve her surgery. I was the silent beneficiary but it meant that they artificially delayed her authorization after agreeing to give it until after my own, such that she was lucky to have the surgery scheduled for just one month after my own (yesterday, in fact) – this despite the fact that she’d started seeking surgery months before me. we learned of each other online as we both selected the same surgeon and posted about it on /r/TransgenderSurgeries and quickly learned of Kaiser Permanente’s attempt to force us both to have a surgical procedure that was medically contraindicted – I barely had enough material for the vaginoplasty as is and an orchiectomy would have led to my scrotal skin atrophying during the wait for the vaginoplasty.

KP in my region does not have any staff surgeons who can perform vaginoplasty yet so they provided me a list of 3 surgeons that they treated as in-network. one was only known for performing trans masc surgeries, one was a relatively unknown plastic surgeon with no documented results in trans circles, and the last was OHSU where Dr. Daniel Dugi and Dr. Geolani Dy performed vaginoplasties. Dr. Dugi had a long trackrecord which had started spotty but looked solid in recent years while Dr. Dy was a newly graduated resident of NYU’s residency program where she’d helped perform a new vaginoplasty procedure developed there – laparoscopic peritoneal vaginoplasty. the new procedure was a modified version of one developed for cis women, born without a vagina, and is widely sought after at the moment because it results in a vaginal interior that’s indistinguishable from a cis vaginal canal – the internal (peritoneal) skin undergoes conversion in it’s new environment and develops into cis-typical vaginal mucosa. moreover, the surgeon who trained Dr. Dy (Dr. Rachel Bluebond-Lagner) is widely respected in the trans femme community – wait times to see her at NYU for a surgical consult are currently two years minimum. so despite not having a ton of results from Dr. Dy that I could look at directly, I selected her for my surgery and saw her for a consult at the end of 5/2021.

between Dr. Dy, her Physician’s Assistant (Dorian Scull), and one of her residents, they filled in a lot of the gaps in my knowledge about the procedure. there’s a lot of incorrect stuff floating around in trans circles that I had to sort through and interrogate with their help before I felt comfortable scheduling my procedure. I had begun hair removal in 12/2020 and, by the time of my consult, Dr. Dy was confident that I had cleared the 80% hair removal threshold and so I was able to schedule surgery immediately. they intially gave me a date of 2021-09-30 but called me in August to reschedule that because of an administrative error, securing the date for the OR. my new date was 2021-10-13 and this time they also scheduled all my other pre and post-op appointments. however, this was not to be, either. covid spiked in Portland through August and September and my procedure was cancelled by mid-September. I didn’t hear back from OHSU until mid-October when they rescheduled my procedure for 2021-12-08. I cannot underscore how much these schedule disruptions affected me. not only was my entire life on hold around this event but it also made clear to me just how much I needed this procedure done ASAP – the delays signficantly impacted my mental health.

the rest

what follows is a detailed breakdown of the whole recovery process that will hopefully help other trans femmes who undergo this or a similar procedure; and especially those considering the same surgical team at OHSU. I’ll include these as top-level replies to this post to avoid character limits.

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pre-op notes

  • clear liquid diet day before; no colon cleanse
  • don’t have to stop hrt, recommend switching from pills to injections
  • nicotine urine test required. it’s apparently sensitive enough to pick up even nicotine ingested within 6 weeks or even from second-hand smoke exposure. extremely bullshit.
  • BMI must be <35 or they won’t operate.
  • no paperwork day of surgery - consent form signed in pre-op
  • prescriptions are provided by the hospital; they don’t want you to bring your own meds
  • Physician’s Assistant & anesthesiologist recommended in pre-ops that I inject estrogen early, prior to the surgery, rather than trying to get administration at the hospital. apparently they won’t give it and they won’t let you give it to yourself.

day-of schedule

  • arrived at hospital day-of @ 5:30a
  • in for surgery at 7:30a
  • on OR table by 8a (I was unconscious shortly after)
  • surgery started at 8:30a according to surgeon
  • surgeon made 3 calls to support person during operation - 9:15a, 11:30a, 3:30p
  • Woke up at 2:45p in post-anaesthesia unit
  • In recovery room at 5
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