Surgery
After the operation, you wake up in the recovery room. You will have one to one nursing care. The nurse looks after you until you are awake and well enough to go back to the ward.
Everybody is different when they are waking up after an operation. It takes some people longer than others to wake up. Some people remain very sleepy for a while afterwards. You may be in the recovery room for hours before you are ready to go back to the ward.
Back on the ward your doctor will see you regularly. Specialist nurses may visit you. They look after people who have had major surgery but do not need to be in the intensive care or high dependency unit.
Sometimes you may wake up in the (ICU) or (HDU) after your operation. This is so your doctors can keep a closer eye on you. This may happen if:
your general health is poor
the operation took longer than planned
the operation was more complicated than the doctors thought it would be
In the ICU you have one to one nursing care. In the HDU you have very close nursing care.
The staff in the ICU or HDU will speak to a member of your family or friends about visitors. But, you usually move back to the ward within a day or so.
When you wake up, you’ll have several tubes or drains. This can be frightening, so it helps to know what they’re for.
These might include:
drips to give you blood transfusions and fluids, usually into a vein in your neck and arms
a chest drain – this is a tube attached to a bottle that helps to drain air and fluid from around your wound and to help your lung expand again
a tube into your bladder (catheter) to measure how much urine you pass
a small tube into an artery to check your blood pressure
You might also have an oxygen mask over your nose and mouth.
Electronic pumps may control any medicines you have through your drip.
It’s normal to have some soreness or pain for the first week or so. You will be given painkillers.
Tell your doctor or nurse as soon as you feel any pain. They need your help to find the right type and dose of painkiller for you. Painkillers work best when you take them regularly.
Immediately after surgery you might have one or more of the following to control your pain:
continuous painkillers through a drip into your bloodstream – you control this by pressing a button when you have pain (patient controlled analgesia or PCA)
painkillers given directly into the area around the lung through a small tube called a paravertebral catheter
continuous painkillers through a drip into your bloodstream controlled by a pump to give you a constant dose
You get painkillers to take home. Follow the instructions your nurse gives you about how often and when to take them. Contact your doctor if you still have pain or if it gets worse.
Some people find they have pain for a long time after surgery for lung cancer. Let your doctor or specialist nurse know if your pain continues for more than a few weeks.
You might have dressings over your wounds. After a couple of days, your nurse changes the dressings and cleans the wounds.
The size and number of your surgical wounds depend on whether you had open surgery or keyhole surgery. You might have about 3 smaller wounds if you had keyhole surgery. You have at least one wound, a longer incision, with open surgery.
Most wounds have dissolvable stitches, but you might have stitches or clips that stay in for about 10 days. You can go home with the stitches in if your wound is still healing and you’re otherwise well. A district nurse then takes the stitches out. This could be at home or you might need to go back to your GP surgery.
Before you go home, your nurse gives you information about how to care for the wound.
Your nurses and physiotherapists help you to move around as soon as possible. They check you’re doing your breathing and leg exercises. This helps you recover.
You might be sitting in a chair within 12 hours of your operation. The day after, you’ll be walking around your bed. And within a few days you’ll be able to walk along the hospital corridor.
Once you are fully awake and feel able to, you can have something to eat and drink. You might not feel like eating much at first. You gradually build up what you drink and eat.
You’ll need help when you first go home.
You’re likely to feel very tired for several weeks and sometimes months after your surgery. It helps to do a bit more every day.
Try:
sitting for less time each day
walking around the house a bit more each day
building up to walking outside
What you can do depends on how fit you were before your surgery and any problems you have afterwards. Talk to the physiotherapist or your doctor if you’re unsure about what you should be doing.
Contact your doctor or specialist nurse if you have any problems or symptoms you are unsure about.
After surgery to your chest you shouldn’t drive until the effects of the anaesthetic and painkillers have worn off. Your wounds must have healed well. At first the seat belt may press on your wound and make it sore.
Your doctor will tell you when you can start driving, but this can be 6 to 12 weeks after surgery. It might be sooner than this after keyhole surgery. Some insurance companies also specify that you shouldn’t drive for a certain amount of time after chest surgery. So it is important to check with your car insurance company.
You have a follow up appointment about 2 to 6 weeks after your surgery.
At the follow up appointment your surgeon:
gives you the results of the surgery
examines you
asks you how you are and if you have had any problems
The appointment is also your chance to ask the doctor questions about your surgery. Write down any questions you have before your appointment to help you remember what you want to ask. Taking someone with you can help you to remember what the doctor says.
How often you have check ups after that depends on the results of your surgery. Ask your doctor or specialist nurse how often you need to have check ups and what they will involve.
If you are worried about anything or notice any new symptoms between appointments, let your doctor or nurse know as soon as possible. You don’t have to wait until the next appointment.
Last reviewed: 08 Oct 2025
Next review due: 08 Oct 2028
There is a risk of problems or complications after any operation. Many problems are minor but some can be life threatening. Treating them as soon as possible is important.
The type of surgery you might have depends on where in the lung your cancer is, how big it is, and your general health.
Your treatment depends on several factors. These include what type of lung cancer you have, how big it is and whether it has spread (the stage). It also depends on your general health.
Lung cancer starts in the windpipe (trachea), the main airway (bronchus) or the lung tissue. Cancer that starts in the lung is called primary lung cancer.
There is support available during and after treatment to help you cope. This includes support from your clinical nurse specialist, cancer charities, community services, and family and friends.

About Cancer generously supported by Dangoor Education since 2010. Learn more about Dangoor Education
Search our clinical trials database for all cancer trials and studies recruiting in the UK.
Meet and chat to other cancer people affected by cancer.
Questions about cancer? Call freephone 0808 800 40 40 from 9 to 5 - Monday to Friday. Alternatively, you can email us.