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Author Topic: How 2 Amput8  (Read 461 times)

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Offline Grumpmeister

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How 2 Amput8
« on: December 03, 2008, 07:15:43 PM »
These are the kind of people we need running the health service. People who use what they have innovatively in order to get the job done instead of carping on about needing new gadgets that turn out to be a waste of money.

Quote
A British doctor volunteering in DR Congo used text message instructions from a colleague to perform a life-saving amputation on a boy.

Vascular surgeon David Nott helped the 16-year-old while working 24-hour shifts with medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) in Rutshuru.

The boy's left arm had been ripped off and was badly infected and gangrenous.

Mr Nott, 52, from London, had never performed the operation but followed instructions from a colleague who had.

The surgeon, who is based at Charing Cross Hospital in west London, said: "He was dying. He had about two or three days to live when I saw him."

Careful instructions

It is not clear how the boy was injured. It was suggested that he had been bitten by a hippopotamus while fishing, but Mr Nott also heard that he had been caught in crossfire between government and rebel forces.

There were just 6in (15cm) of the boy's arm remaining, much of the surrounding muscle had died and there was little skin to fold over the wound.

Mr Nott knew he needed to perform a forequarter amputation, requiring removal of the collar bone and shoulder blade.

He contacted Professor Meirion Thomas, from London's Royal Marsden Hospital, who had performed the operation before.

"I texted him and he texted back step by step instructions on how to do it," he said.

"Even then I had to think long and hard about whether it was right to leave a young boy with only one arm in the middle of this fighting.

"But in the end he would have died without it so I took a deep breath and followed the instructions to the letter.

"I knew exactly what my colleague meant because we have operated together many times."

The operation is only performed about 10 times a year in the UK, usually on cancer patients, and requires the back-up of an intensive-care unit. Patients usually lose a lot of blood during the procedure.

Mr Nott, from Fulham, west London, had just one pint of blood and an elementary operating theatre, but the operation, performed in October, was a success and the teenager made a full recovery.

The surgeon, who volunteers with MSF for a month every year, said: "I don't think there's more than two or three surgeons in the UK who can do this. It was just luck that I was there and could do it.

"I don't think that someone that wasn't a vascular surgeon would have been able to deal with the large blood vessels involved. That is why I volunteer myself so often, I love being able to save someone's life."

In the absence of intensive-care facilities, Mr Nott said he had personally monitored the boy's recovery from his bedside, tending his wounds.

"It was touch and go whether he would make it so when I saw his face on the MSF website afterwards, it was a real delight," he added.
The universe is run by the complex interweaving of three elements. Energy, matter, and enlightened self-interest.

Offline Snoopy

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Re: How 2 Amput8
« Reply #1 on: December 03, 2008, 07:19:38 PM »
 happ096

Sometimes it is not such a bad world after all.

Let's not think about how this boy will live from now on ~ sufficient that he is still alive.
I used to have a handle on life but it broke.

Offline Grumpmeister

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Re: How 2 Amput8
« Reply #2 on: December 03, 2008, 07:29:32 PM »
He will adapt Snoop. When I was younger I did some volunteer work in a Romanian orphanage not long after they shot Caucescu. One of the kids there didnt have any arms. The first time I saw him he was sweeping the floor in the main building, holding the handle of the broom between his chin and his shoulder, I offered to do it for him and he told me that he wanted to do it because it was a challenge.
The universe is run by the complex interweaving of three elements. Energy, matter, and enlightened self-interest.