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Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Pus

We had a couple of really long, full days. One of those days, Dr. Scott had to cancel consults because we had too many operations, a couple of which were urgent. As the name of this post suggests, there was a lot of pus involved.

We had one elderly man with an old femur fracture that had only a small hole on the skin. What was weird was that he was very skinny, and his other leg was very thin, but his broken leg had a huge thigh. Dr. Scott made an incision starting from the hole and as he widened it, pus just started pouring out. We suctioned about 2 LITERS of pus from this guy's thigh. As you can imagine, there was not much muscle or bone left, it was just mush. How in the world he wasn't septic and dead yet, I have no idea.

So we called the family and said there was no way to save the leg and asked if they were ok with an amputation. Well, the patient himself, who was semiconscious*, heard it and said he did NOT want an amputation. So we closed it back up and wheeled him out to get ready for the next patient.

But now the family talked to him, and explained that really, there was no leg to be saved, it would never be functional again, and on top of that, he was going to get septic and die. So he agreed to it, and we had to take him back to the OR.

Then, we had a guy come in with a huge dental abscess. His family almost took him home, but thank goodness, they didn't. The abscess was so big, once he was anesthetized, his muscles relaxed and it actually blocked his airway. He stopped breathing for a moment and I actually had to do CPR while they secured his airway with a nasal tube and administered O2.

Again, Dr. Scott made a small hole and pus just started pouring out. It's incredible!! I can't imagine how he could take days and days of pain before coming in!!!

So today I got to do 3 things I had never done before: made a skin incision and superficial suture on a leg (the amputated one), and did CPR on a real person (not the dummies we use in class).

What a day!!!

*our anesthesia is a combination of epidural, ketamine and diazepam. Sometimes the patients are knocked out, sometimes they're awake, talking, sometimes even moving. We have no respirator, so we cannot do full narcosis.

Before amputation

After amputation

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