Tastebuds and Tonsillectomy, now that's a chapter! My son had a tonsillectomy 2 yrs ago and i had mine earlier this month (Feb. 11th).
For each of us the tastebud thing was noticeable. For him, it only lasted about a week where things were tasting weird/ickie/not right. But he's just a kid under 12. He healed quickly.
For me, i'm just over 40 and am not healing as quickly. the taste issue remains for me. things that i used to enjoy as "sweet" seem to have a bitter aftertaste, or they taste "industrial" or like used antifreeze (metallic, i guess). it is getting better as time goes by (i'm at the beginning of week 3, post-op), which is good. as long as a person has white patches in the throat/tongue area, the skin is still actively healing--coated with mucous and trying to get normal again--and this will take a while. apparently for some of us...several weeks! not 7-14 days!
hang in there, and believe in yourself and your powers of healing.
i've already been re-hospitalized (last week) due to dehydration and severe pain and throat swelling. i did not know if i'd make it out alive, but i did, thanks to my gen. practioner, not the ENT surgeon, who had insisted i simply "tough it out."
there is a lot they don't tell us grown-ups about how it is different when they mess with our throats. there is a lot more they can/do cut away, cauterize, and mess with, for one thing! and our muscles and jaws take quite a beating from the procedure. all this trauma means time, much more time, for us to heal. keep a journal, and chronicle the road for yourself. you'll find that you can make it after all!
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nobody knows what's going to happen to anybody beside the forlorn rags of growing old.-Kerouac, 1955
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