Thanks to all!
After a LONNNGGGG day Sat. all is going well. They had him up walking today, less than 24 hours after surgery.
Lots of little issues created delays, but to be honest it was just his Family Dr. being very careful. First issue to deal with was the Plavix/Aspirin he was taking, but blood-work indicated it was a non issue. Then the troop of specialists came through. The new cardio team ( his cardio guy of many years retired last month) wanted a scan of his heart, told me is cardiac function was at 30%, but they cleared him for surgery. The the neurologist had to stop by, for what ever reason, and the nephrologist. All said OK, and surgery was to be late Sat. morning -- to me that means 11 AM or so. Well after delays on top of delays, he got in at 5:30 PM. Took all of 45 minutes, and all went well. They used a spinal block, the the cardiologist said it really didn't matter if they used general, which is news to me, his old cardio guy always insisted on spinal whenever possible.
In recovery the nurse and I looked over the surgical notes and she indicated it looked like his cardiac function was about 43%, certainly better that the 30% noted earlier. BP was pretty stable during surgery, always a worry. Ortho guy said no restrictions on activity, but to expect a 7 to 10 day hospital stay.
Now comes the recovery, and the issue that develop with any hospital stay for him. The first few days he's pretty coherent, but I noticed the early signs of trouble today. 3 or 4 days into a stay he gets a full blown case of sundowners, if any of you experienced it with a relative you know it can be hell. Last year I had to run up to the hospital at 2 AM to calm him down. I think it stems from him being out of his familiar environment. Luckily after a few days it passes, but it's still hard to take.
The surgical nurse was telling be about her grandfather who broke his hip at 107. He had it repaired and all went well, but he didn't bounce back and went downhill quickly after that. I asked what they do if they can't get clearance for do surgery, and she indicated that eventually there is not choice in many cases, and surgery has to be done. The Dr. said my dad's case was pretty typical, a sharp break at the hip ball. Since the bone was sheared off he was sure so were the blood vessels the fed it. Without surgery the bone would die and create more problems.
Anyway, thanks for the encouragement and kind thoughts they are all much appreciated.