Tag Archives: hand surgeon

Why doctors fall asleep while treating you

Editor’s note: Dr. Anthony Youn is a plastic surgeon in metro Detroit. He is the author of ” In Stitches ,” a humorous memoir about growing up Asian-American and becoming a doctor.

Confession: I’ve fallen asleep while operating on patients. and I’m sure I’m not the only one.

No, I’ve never passed out and face-planted into a patient’s open belly. nor have I fallen asleep in the operating room as a plastic surgeon in practice. But as a resident, I performed the dreaded head-bob several times. here is a typical scenario:

The OR is silent, except for the rhythmic beep from the anesthesia machine. My surgical scrubs feel warm, like a pair of comfy pajamas. I sit, holding two tiny retractors, while the hand surgeon meticulously dissects the patient’s carpal tunnel. It’s a surgery I’ve assisted on dozens of times before.

I blink and try to remember what day it is. it seems like forever ago that I arrived at the hospital. In fact, it’s been more than 32 hours since my shift started. during this past day and a half, I’ve logged more than 15 hours in the OR and exactly zero minutes of sleep.

My eyelids feel heavy, as if being pulled down by an invisible force. I begin shaking my knee up and down, an attempt to keep myself awake.

“Stay still!” the attending surgeon growls.

Heaviness returns to my eyelids. I’m dancing on the edge of sleep. Five minutes later, I lose the battle. My head briefly bobs down, then back up.

I immediately look around. has anyone noticed? Apparently not the surgeon.

I look at the scrub technician, sitting to my right. She nods her head at me, knowingly. then she digs her heel into my foot. Hard.

I suppress a yelp.

Residency, the training to become a real, practicing physician, is brutal. during my surgical residency back in the late ’90s, I was routinely expected to work up to 36 hours straight, without sleep or a designated break. Sure, I occasionally caught a few zzz’s in the call room, but many nights were spent wide awake taking care of patients.

I was one of the lucky ones. Although often overworked, I never considered myself abused. Some residents had it a lot worse.

Things aren’t quite as bad today as they were 14 years ago. In July 2011, the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education implemented new resident work hour standards, instituting a maximum 16-hour shift for postgraduate first-year residents, aka interns.

These new rules have created concern among residents regarding their education. a survey published in the June issue of Archives of Surgery found that surgical interns believed the new regulations would decrease their time spent operating, acquisition of medical knowledge, development of surgical skills and overall educational experience.

So what’s the real benefit to reducing resident work hours? The Archives of Surgery survey also found that the majority of interns believed the new regulations would improve the quality and safety of patient care. As physicians, this should be our primary concern.

Proper residency training shouldn’t necessitate working young doctors so hard that they’re forced to make patient care decisions or perform medical procedures while excessively fatigued. Studies show that impairment in cognitive and motor performance when sleep-deprived for 24 hours is equivalent to having a blood-alcohol level of 0.1%. this is considered legally drunk.

Do you want a drunken doctor operating on you?

As a physician, my patients expect me to be at my best when treating them. part of being at my best includes being well-rested. Since my residency days, I’ve never fallen asleep in the operating room. Not even close.

But it often disturbs me when I think about how sleep-deprived I was as a resident.

My patients deserved better.

More from Dr. Youn: Seriously? Doctors say they’re underpaid

Why doctors fall asleep while treating you

Swift surgery makes UNC point guard’s return possible

Just 24 hours after suffering a fracture of his scaphoid bone, Kendall Marshall, point guard for the University of North Carolina Tar Heels, was recovering from surgery and contemplating playing again.

Marshall’s father said his son would decide later in the week whether to return to the court when his team faces Ohio Friday night in the Sweet Sixteen. And that return is a very real possibility, according to Dr. Wallace Andrew, a hand surgeon with Raleigh Orthopaedic Clinic.

Andrew was not the operating surgeon for Marshall’s injury, but said he has seen similar wrist fractures at his clinic.

“It would be the same injury that John Henson had except that Henson didn’t quite hit hard enough,” Andrew said. “And I suspect Marshall had a little rotation with his.”

Marshall’s teammate John Henson sat out three games – two in the ACC Tournament and one in the NCAA Tournament – with a sprained wrist.

Andrew said Marshall’s method of treatment – surgery and the insertion of a self-tightening screw to fix the break – is a common course for athletes. 

“As you tighten the screw, it compresses the fracture site together and gives it better stability,” he said.

Marshall’s wrist will be stable enough to play, Andrew said. Most patients wear a cast to immobilize the thumb. A hand therapist could make a soft plastic cast for Marshall, who could replace it with heavy tape to play.

Whether he does or not is a matter of his pain tolerance.”If you do surgery, it will make it safe for you to play,” Andrew said. “It’s going to be painful, and it just depends on how painful it is.”

Andrew noted that should the Tar Heels advance, Marshall would likely feel less pain as time goes on. 

Swift surgery makes UNC point guard’s return possible

W.P. Andrew Lee to head new Department of Plastic Surgery

W.P. Andrew Lee, a Pennsylvania hand surgeon heralded for his successful hand transplants and breakthrough research on overcoming rejection in composite tissue grafting, has been named chair of the newly formed Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

Creation of the new department will facilitate its access to additional funding for research and innovation, and an improved platform for the training and recruitment of surgeons. Nationally, the training of plastic surgeons has become independent of surgery residency programs.

Additionally, as part of this transition, Johns Hopkins Medicine’s Burn Center will fall under the auspices of the recently created department.

A 1983 graduate of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Lee, 53, has been chief of the Division of Plastic Surgery and professor of surgery and orthopedic surgery at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine since 2002. Lee, whose team has transplanted the greatest number of hands in the United States, led the surgical team that performed the nation’s first double hand transplant in may 2009 and the first above-elbow transplant earlier this year. Lee pioneered hand transplants and created a means of using minimal anti-rejection drugs for these procedures known now as the Pittsburgh Protocol.

Lee succeeds Paul N. Manson, who had headed the division—formerly part of the Department of Surgery—since 1990. Manson will continue as a faculty member within the department, conducting research and seeing patients.

“Andy Lee is an outstanding plastic surgeon, physician, teacher, researcher and administrator,” said Edward D. Miller, the Frances Watt Baker, M.D., and Lenox D. Baker Jr., M.D., Dean of the Medical Faculty and CEO of Johns Hopkins Medicine. “We are convinced that he will serve not only the needs of the Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery but also those of the medical school, its students and faculty.”

Lee’s research interests focus on “tolerance strategies” for composite tissue allografts, such as a hand or face transplant, to minimize the need for long-term systemic immunosuppression. He has received approximately $5 million of federal funding for his investigations, authored more than 115 original publications in peer-reviewed journals and written more than 35 textbook chapters on hand surgery and composite tissue transplant subjects.

Julie Freischlag, chair of the Department of Surgery and a member of the team that recruited Lee, said that the hand surgeon “brings to Johns Hopkins not only his surgical credentials but a demonstrated ability to envision the future and build world-class programs.”

At the University of Pittsburgh, Lee built a division of more than 20 faculty members with a focus on plastic surgery research and surgical techniques and brought them to international prominence. as its chief, he also oversaw its renowned plastic surgery residency and hand and microvascular surgery fellowships.

Lee has received more than 70 awards and honors, including the Kappa Delta Young Investigator Award from the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, the Sumner Koch Award and the Sterling Bunnell Traveling Fellowship from the American Society for Surgery of the Hand. He is currently serving as president-elect of the American Society for Surgery of the Hand, vice chair of the American Board of Plastic Surgery and president of the Robert H. Ivy Society of Plastic Surgeons. He is leading the program on extremity injuries in a consortium of the Armed Forces Institute of Regenerative Medicine. He was the chairman of the Plastic Surgery Research Council in 2001–2002 and helped to create in 2008 the American Society for Reconstructive Transplantation.

He received his bachelor’s degree in physics with honors from Harvard College in 1979. After graduating in 1983 from medical school and finishing his general surgery residency in 1989 at Johns Hopkins, Lee completed his plastic surgery fellowship at the Massachusetts General Hospital in 1991 and his orthopedic hand fellowship at the Indiana Hand Center in 1993. That same year, he joined the academic faculty of the Division of Plastic Surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, and became director of its Plastic Surgery Research Laboratory and subsequently chief of Hand Service in the Department of Surgery. In 2002, Lee was recruited to the University of Pittsburgh to head its plastic surgery program.

Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at Johns Hopkins

W.P. Andrew Lee to head new Department of Plastic Surgery

Top East Lancashire doctor: Cosmetic surgery ‘is life changing’ (From Blackburn Citizen)

Top East Lancashire doctor: Cosmetic surgery ‘is life changing’

2:19pm Thursday 10th March 2011

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a TOP East Lancashire surgeon has warned people cosmetic surgery is a ‘life changing decision not to be taken lightly’.

Blackburn Rovers legend Colin Hendry lost his wife Denise two years ago to an infection which was traced back to botched liposuction surgery in 2002.

An inquest this week found that the mum-of-four, who was just 43 when she died, suffered punctures to her bowel nine times during an operation performed by Dr Gustav Aniansson, at the private Broughton Park Hospital, near Preston, in April 2002.

Jeyaram Srinivasan, consultant plastic, reconstructive and hand surgeon at The Beardwood Hospital in Blackburn, said problems were rare.

But he urged those considering cosmetic surgery to take great time and care when making the decision to go under the knife.

The private BMI Healthcare facility in Preston New Road said it had seen a 102 per cent increase in inquiries from patients looking to undergo a cosmetic procedure since the start of this year.

The biggest growth, 211 per cent, was seen in inquiries concerning gynaecomastia, or ‘man-boob’ surgical procedures.

And for women, breast augmentation inquiries rose by 179 per cent.

mr Srinivasan said: “We felt it was important to remind people that having cosmetic surgery is a very serious, life-changing decision.

“And one which should not be rushed or taken lightly.

“Women and men should not let their eagerness for change overpower their ability to make a responsible choice about their surgeon, hospital and desired procedure.”

mr Srinivasan said patients must also check their surgeon’s credentials.

He said they should also ensure that they pick a consultant surgeon on the General Medical Council specialist register, a member of the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons, and somebody who regularly performs the type of procedure they are interested in.

The surgeon also advised people talk through their plans with their GP, who knows their medical history, past patients who have had the same procedure.

And they should discuss any decision with trusted family and friends.

<a href="http://www.blackburncitizen.co.uk/news/8902464.Top_East_Lancs_doctor__Cosmetic_surgery____is_life_changing___/tag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.blackburncitizen.co.uk/news/8902464.Top_East_Lancs_doctor__Cosmetic_surgery____is_life_changing___/Fri, 11 Mar 2011 09:33:09 GMT 00:00″>Top East Lancashire doctor: Cosmetic surgery ‘is life changing’ (From Blackburn Citizen)