Tag Archives: practicing medicine

Doctors use procedure they pioneered on 1,000th patient

Carlos Gutierrez of Miami made history as the 1,000th patient to receive a treatment pioneered nearly 20 years ago in South Florida by a team of doctors at Baptist Cardiac & Vascular Institute.

The innovative repair allows patients to evade a silent killer that tends to strike at midlife and into the golden years.

Doctors recently told Gutierrez, 63, that he was a victim of an abdominal aortic aneurysm. It is called a silent killer because the bulging of the aorta grows without symptoms. had his aneurysm gone undiscovered, it was large enough to burst, resulting in a painful death.

Gutierrez went home the following day after treatment.

“More than 1,000 patients keep on living because of our commitment not only to practicing medicine but to improving it,” said Barry T. Katzen, MD, founder and medical director of the Institute.

Eighteen years ago Philip Shroyer, 72, was the second patient in South Florida to receive the treatment when he was living in what is now Palmetto Bay. The retired mail carrier had participated in a clinical research trial at the Institute, one of only five centers in the nation and the only center at the time in South Florida treating the disease using an experimental, less invasive technology.

Rather than open the abdomen, doctors entered the groin and traversed a highway of blood vessels to reach the aorta. they repaired the bubbled blood vessel with small, tube-like devices called stent grafts.

Shroyer went home days after the procedure and returned to work a few weeks later at a time when open surgery required months for recovery. Today, Shroyer is a healthy, active retiree enjoying his grandchildren.

 The Institute’s unique multidisciplinary approach to cardiovascular treatment was evident during the milestone procedure performed by two interventional radiologists, Dr. Katzen and James Benenati, MD, and vascular surgeon Athanassios I. Tsoukas, MD.

They repaired Gutierrez’s aneurysm using the endovascular procedure pioneered by Dr. Katzen, Dr. Benenati, Orlando Puente, MD, and the late Jose Alvarez, MD.

“It’s an incredible landmark because of the total number of patients we have treated,” said Dr. Benenati, the Institute’s medical director of the Peripheral Vascular Laboratory.

Institute doctors performed their first aneurysm repair on Mar. 17, 1994, at a time when it was so experimental there was still an issue about whether interventional radiology, a fledgling specialty, should be involved in what traditionally had been a surgeon’s domain.

“The easiest thing would have been just to operate with open surgery, but we were willing to push the envelope and try not to operate. we were on the forefront,” said Dr. Puente, a vascular surgeon.

Institute doctors, who continue to perform the most abdominal aortic aneurysm repair procedures in South Florida, are invited to teach their knowledge around the state, nation and the world.

“We are still the go-to people because of our wealth of experience,” Dr. Benenati said. Abdominal aortic aneurysms are the 15th leading cause of death in the United States. one in 250 persons, most frequently males, are expected to develop the disease.

“In the old days a good primary physician could palpitate the abdomen and find the mass if it was big. now most aneurysms are diagnosed by screening tools such as CT scans or ultrasounds. Many times they are found while a patient is being tested for other issues,” Dr. Tsoukas said.

Formerly, the only treatment for an abdominal aortic aneurysm was for a surgeon to open the abdomen, wrap the swelling aorta with a plastic wrap much like sandwich wrap, and hope it would last awhile to prevent rupture. such an operation added six years to the life of Albert Einstein.

In the 1950s, surgeons began repairing and replacing the aorta with synthetic tubing called vascular grafts. While very effective in preventing rupture and prolonging life in many patients, the procedure itself is highly invasive, requiring long hospital stays, ICU resources, and is associated with some mortality and complications which could be quite significant.

The modern operation, called an endovascular aortic repair, has become standard procedure that adds decades to the lifespan of otherwise healthy individuals with greatly reduced risk and hospital stay.

 Baptist Cardiac & Vascular Institute is part of Baptist Health South Florida, the largest faith-based, not-for-profit healthcare organization in the region. Established in 1987, the Institute treats heart and blood vessels as a single entity within a multidisciplinary framework that brings together specialists from all areas to collaborate on giving patients the best possible care.

Short URL: http://www.communitynewspapers.com/?p=36671

Doctors use procedure they pioneered on 1,000th patient

April hearing set for woman in underground eye lift surgery case

Wednesday, March 28, 2012 | 11:30 a.m.

Jing Qu, 55, of Flushing, N.Y., was arrested in connection with performing illegal surgical procedures.

A New York woman who is accused of performing unlicensed plastic surgery in the Las Vegas Valley — eye lifts — has had her preliminary hearing delayed for about two weeks.

Jing Qu, 55, of Flushing , N.Y., who authorities say was doing surgery in the living room of a southwest valley home, was to have had the hearing this morning. but at the request of attorneys, it was reset for 8 a.m. April 10 in Las Vegas Justice Court.

Qu, who is out of custody on $100,000 bail, has been charged with one count of burglary and two counts of practicing medicine without a license for performing eye lifts and injections on two women.

According to Metro police, officers responded Nov. 7, 2011, to a home in the 7700 block of Somerhill Point Way after receiving a phone call from a neighbor who reported the surgery.

The neighbor had gone over to the home to complain about a vehicle blocking a driveway and saw three people inside the home performing surgery, police said.

According to a police report, when officers arrived they saw a portable padded massage table set up in the living room and saw one bloody latex glove on the living room floor and another in the bathroom.

Officers also said they saw that the homeowner, Ping Zhang, had a bandage over her right eye, the police report said.

Officers then made contact with a second woman, Hong Sheng, who had stitches above both eyebrows and had dried blood on her forehead, the arrest report said.

Sheng told officers that she knew Qu from their home town of Bejing, China, and had paid Qu $800 for an eyelift surgical procedure. Sheng said Qu injected her with a substance for pain before the procedure, the arrest report said.

Zhang told police she paid Qu $1,000 for her eye lift surgery, and that Qu had injected her with a painkiller prior to the procedure, according to the arrest report.

Through a Mandarin Chinese interpreter, Qu told police she was a physician in China who specialized in plastic surgery but was not licensed to practice medicine in the U.S., according to the arrest report.

During a search of the home, police uncovered medical items such as gauze, hemostats and surgical blades, police said. Police said they also found local anesthetics and other unknown medications, many of which were labeled in Chinese.

April hearing set for woman in underground eye lift surgery case

New victims come forward against fake butt implant doctor

The transgender woman who fooled several “patients” into dangerous — not to mention illegal — plastic surgery was arrested Monday as three more victims came forward.

According to the Huffington Post, last November, O’Neal Morris (a man who identifies as a woman) was arrested — after a year of evading the police — for practicing medicine without a license, causing serious bodily injury. Morris evidently posed as a doctor, offering injections of cement, mineral oil and flat tire sealant that she claimed was silicone and would plump up any desired area — usually the buttocks.

The police began the search when a transgender “patient” came forward and revealed the horrific side effects that almost killed her, thanks to the injections performed by Morris.

With a not-so-clever ruse of a nurse’s uniform, plastic gloves, a room at the Motel 6, and a Pedialyte bottle of enhancer, Morris charged thousands of dollars for her services.

Three victims came forward initially, including the latest to go public, Rajee Narinesingh, who received injections in her cheeks, lips, and chin in 2006, which grew to painful, bulging masses a year later, distorting her face.

Now, Rajee tells RadarOnline, the investigators appear to be building an even larger case against the 30-year-old Miami, Florida native.

“The detectives have been in contact and tell me there have been a number of people who have come forward since I went public,” she said in an exclusive interview. “I am more hurt than I have hate for her, I know she is going to pay as I am a firm believer in Karma. I feel betrayed, I thought I could trust her.”

According to the Miami Herald, the three new victims to report to authorities are Lournise Linton, 41; Ophelia Parker, 36; and Tiffany Kennedy, 36.

The paper also reported that Linton paid Morris $3,500 for 22 injections in May 2009. after a year, she began to experience respiratory problems and discoloration. at the hospital, doctors informed her she had pneumonia and discovered bathroom caulking trapped in her lungs.

The other victims also suffered from severe illnesses due to Morris’s concoction.

Morris, who was released on bail, turned herself in Monday. the trial is scheduled for next month.

New victims come forward against fake butt implant doctor

Crime & Courts

LAS VEGAS –  A husband and wife who performed an illegal buttocks enhancement surgery that resulted in a Las Vegas woman’s death are expected to plead guilty to manslaughter despite an autopsy report that shows the death was accidental.

Elena Caro, 42, died from an allergic reaction to the tumescent anesthesia commonly used in cosmetic surgery procedures, Clark County Coroner Mike Murphy said Friday.

But it is unlikely that Ruben Matallana-Galvas and Carmen Torres-Sanchez would be able to successfully fight the criminal case against them because the death occurred during an illegal operation in which proper safety procedures were not followed, according to Matallana-Galvas’ defense attorney, Scott Coffee. The couple will plead guilty to reduced charges when they return to court Thursday under a plea deal, he said

Matallana-Galvas knows his makeshift medical office did not have the proper tools to care for Caro, Coffee said.

“The doctor didn’t take the actions that we hope he would take in light of the bad reaction,” he said. “He feels terrible for what happened and he wants to take responsibility for what he did.”

Matallana-Galvas and Torres-Sanchez are charged with multiple crimes for Caro’s death, including second-degree murder and practicing medicine without a license. They pleaded not guilty in may and were scheduled to stand trial in February.

But prosecutors have been working to avoid trial by persuading the husband and wife to plead guilty to manslaughter and practicing without a medical license. Matallana-Galvas attempted to go along with the deal during a hearing last week. he withdrew his not guilty plea and pleaded guilty, but the agreement was dropped when Torres-Sanchez refused to plead guilty. she apparently changed her mind and is expected to take the deal at the hearing scheduled for Thursday.

Under the plea deal, Matallana-Galvas and Torres-Sanchez could each serve up to nine years, Coffee said. A lawyer representing Torres-Sanchez could not be reached for comment.

The husband and wife conducted the procedure on Caro in a temporary medical clinic in the back of a Las Vegas tile shop and were not licensed to practice medicine anywhere in the United States.

Coffee said the autopsy report did not come as a surprise.

“The case is pretty much exactly what we thought it was from the beginning, which is it’s a medical procedure where no one intended to do harm to this woman whatsoever,” he said.

Josh Tomsheck, a former Clark County chief deputy district attorney, said the autopsy report wouldn’t bother him if he was prosecuting the case.

“It’s not going to be an issue for the state,” he said. “They are saying essentially that there was a felony committed and during the course of that felony the person died. It doesn’t matter whether it’s intentional or accidental.”

Dr. Julio Garcia, a plastic surgeon in Las Vegas of 24 years, said valid medical practitioners know they might be held accountable if a patient is not treated after reacting badly to anesthesia.

“You should monitor them for at least two or three hours after the procedure,” he said. “You don’t want to do the procedure and leave because the patient could have an adverse reaction, like that patient did.”

Tumescent anesthesia is used to make a specific part of a patient’s body numb. unlike general anesthesia, it does not put the patient to sleep.

“It decreases the pain and it decreases the bruising,” said Dr. Jeffrey Roth, a Las Vegas plastic surgeon who also uses general anesthesia on patients to ensure they don’t feel any pain and monitors their progress with the help of a certified anesthetist. “In other words, we are not going to do surgery in the back of a tile shop.”

Caro was found roaming the streets in agony less than four hours after Matallana-Galvas and Torres-Sanchez injected her buttocks with a gel substance on April 9. she was taken to a hospital, where she died that day.

Matallana-Galvas and Torres-Sanchez allegedly cleared out their medical office after treating Caro and headed to McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas, where they attempted to flee to their native Colombia, according an arrest report. The husband and wife had purchased plane tickets to return to Colombia on April 22 but were trying to catch an earlier flight. They were arrested at the airport.

Matallana-Galvas told detectives that Caro walked away from his office after the procedure. he said he was a homeopathic doctor in Colombia and did not have the proper equipment to perform the buttocks procedure.

Caro was married and had a teenage daughter. A week before her death, she had received facial Botox injections from Matallana-Galvas. when no problems arose, she returned for the buttocks injection.

Botox and similar types of injections are minimally invasive but are still considered cosmetic surgery, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons.

Roth said patients who seek cosmetic surgery need to ensure they are receiving proper care.

“The whole tragedy of this whole thing was that this poor woman went to somebody who was not licensed,” Roth said. “This poor lady may have saved a few dollars, but it cost her her life.”

<a href="http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/07/29/anesthesia-killed-vegas-woman-in-cosmetic-surgery/tag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.foxnews.com/us/2011/07/29/anesthesia-killed-vegas-woman-in-cosmetic-surgery/Sat, 30 Jul 2011 05:08:02 GMT 00:00″>Crime & Courts

Couple could lose plea deal in cosmetic surgery case

A plea deal could fall apart for a Colombian man and his wife whose unlicensed cosmetic surgery was blamed in the death of a Las Vegas woman.

Prosecutors offered to drop a second-degree murder charge against Ruben Dario Matallana-Galvas, 55, and Carmen Olfidia Torres-Sanchez, 47, if both pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter, practicing medicine without a license and conspiracy.

On Thursday, Matallana-Galvas, who has identified himself as a homeopathic doctor, did plead guilty to the charges; but his wife, Torres-Sanchez, a lawyer with the Colombian attorney general’s office, would not say she was an active participant in the surgery.

Authorities allege Matallana-Galvas and his wife flew into Las Vegas to operate an illegal medical practice in April and performed plastic surgery on Elena Caro, 42, that led to her death.

Caro died April 9, shortly after Matallana-Galvas injected her with "a gel-type substance" in an illegal buttocks enhancement procedure in the backroom of a tile store.

Prosecutor Marc DiGiacomo said the deal would be off unless Torres-Sanchez confessed her role in the surgery, which included Torres-Sanchez marking Caro’s body for the injections, according to testimony given to the grand jury that indicted the couple.

District Judge Abbi Silver ordered Torres-Sanchez and her attorneys to discuss the agreement again over the next two weeks. Torres-Sanchez is set to appear again before Silver on Aug. 4.

According to the plea agreement, Matallana-Galvas and his wife could be sentenced to probation or one to nine years in prison.

But if Torres-Sanchez does not admit her role, both she and her husband would face a murder charge at a February 2012 trial. if convicted, they would face 10 years to life in prison.

Authorities have said Matallana-Galvas did not have a license to perform plastic surgery in Colombia and that his wife is being terminated from her job as a federal prosecutor in that country.

Family members said Caro learned of the service from advertising at a local beauty salon.

Las Vegas police arrested the couple April 10 at McCarran International Airport as they tried to change previously purchased tickets to return to Colombia.

Both are being held on $500,000 bail at the Clark County Detention Center.

Contact reporter Francis McCabe at fmccabe@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-1039.

<a href="http://www.lvrj.com/news/couple-accused-of-unlicensed-cosmetic-surgery-could-lose-plea-deal-125977128.html?ref=128tag:news.google.com,2005:cluster=http://www.lvrj.com/news/couple-accused-of-unlicensed-cosmetic-surgery-could-lose-plea-deal-125977128.html?ref=128Thu, 21 Jul 2011 21:26:09 GMT 00:00″>Couple could lose plea deal in cosmetic surgery case