During some types of surgery, your surgeon may need to place a drain under your skin. A drain helps bodily fluids leave your body so that they do not collect under or near your incision (surgical cut). Removing these fluids helps the wound heal, can prevent infection, and can lessen the amount of drainage on surgical bandages. There are a few kinds of surgical drains. One common type is called a Jackson-Pratt drain, or JP drain.
A JP drain is a closed suction device. This means that the fluids are collected within a closed system, without the need for an outside suction machine. A JP drain has a thin, flexible rubber tube that sits under the skin in the area under or near the incision. Often, your skin and the tube are sutured (stitched) together to make sure the JP drain does not move from under your skin. At the end of the tube is a small squeeze bulb. Bodily fluids pass through the tube into the bulb. The bulb has a plug, or stopper, where you can empty fluids and push air out.
When air is removed from the bulb (done by squeezing it), it will start to suction. This suction, or “negative pressure,” will gently pull the fluids out from your body and into the bulb. The plug on the bulb is opened to drain the fluid that collects and then closed to start the suction again. It is important to squeeze the air out of the bulb each time you empty it so that the suction, or negative pressure, can keep pulling the fluid out of your body.
Your care team will teach you how to care for your wound and drain. Talk with your care team if you or your caretaker have any questions about caring for your drain. Some general tips for caring for your JP drain are:
If you or a caretaker have any questions about caring for your drain while at home, call your provider. Some reasons you should call your care team right away are if:
The length of time that you have the JP drain depends on the type of surgery you had and how much drainage you are having. When it is time for the drain to be removed, your provider will either remove it in the office or it will be removed by a home care nurse. This is quick and often painless. Your provider will then tell you how to care for your skin and what to look for once the drain is out.
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