.comment-link {margin-left:.6em;}

Bhakua Sadei ଭକୁଆ ସଦେଇ

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Anesthetists & Surgeons

25/02/2015 13:02: Sadasiv Swain: By Malcolm Fisher (World Medicine October 1976)

Surgeons and anaesthetist have a curious sadomasochistic relationship.

The love-hate aspects of the relationship are governed by two historical truths: without surgeons, anaesthetists would be unemployed and, because all surgical progress has been made possible by
anaesthesia, without anaesthetists, most patients would rather keep their gallbladders, prepuces, and ugly noses.

As surgery has progressed and become more horrendous the function of the anaesthetist has changed from providing good operating conditions for the surgeon to saving the patient from the surgeon. As one cynic put it: "They will do a brain transplant one day, just as soon as I can work out which bit to wake up".

I got my first insight into this unique relationship when I changed from being a surgical resident to being an anaesthetic resident.

On my first day I learned the basics from someone who, while unknown in scientific circles, is regarded highly in the antipodes as an anaesthetic philosopher. In my first five minutes he taught me the three fundamentals of anaesthesia.

* "Always check the oxygen supply."

* "Always identify the patient and the operation."

* "Hate all surgeons and hate the slow bastards most."

I was a little taken aback but I soon learnt that these rules, like many other things he told me, were essential for survival.

On my second day, he initiated me into the inner circle which knows the Cook's three laws of surgery:

* Surgery begets surgery.

* The adjustment of an operating light is an immediate signal for the surgeon to place his head at the focal point.

* No substance is more opaque than a surgeon's head.

After three weeks I believed I had anaesthesia mastered, much so that I asked a surgeon what the difference was between a three week resident anaesthetic and a twenty year consultant anaesthetic. "Very little," he informed me brutally. "the only major difference is that when something goes wrong and a junior is anaesthetising, I know, and when a consultant is anaesthetising I find out in the tea room when it is all over."

I confronted the anaesthetic philosopher with this disturbing information and learnt the next most important lesson.

* "Never tell the surgeon anything. There is nothing he can do and he will only get in a flap."

* There were only four things he said to tell surgeon in time of crisis.

* "Please get the retractor off the heart."

* "Could you stop a few bleeders and give me time to catch up."

* "Could you give cardiac massage."

* "You can stop now - he's dead."

I then went on and learned the complexities of the surgeon-anaesthetist relationship.

I heard of the famous Jones technique of anaesthesia where the anaesthetist stands at the foot of the table and tells the surgeon how to operate while the surgeon's assistant hold the patient on the table.

I learned that fitness for anaesthesia was a meaningless term; anyone who could lie down was fit, but fitness for surgery was a different matter entirely.

Fitness for surgery can be decided over the telephone by asking who the surgeon is, where the patient is going after, and what the operation is. All the pre-operative examination tells you is how and when.

I learned to understand the prima donna complexities of the surgeon and to recognise when the operation was not going well.

* All surgeons follow the same procedure.

* Adjust retractors

* Reposition assistants

* Make bigger hole

* Change sides

* Order multiple light adjustments

* Ask for more relaxation

* Curse scrub nurse, resident, registrar, health commission, government, anaesthetist, and deity

* Remove alternative organ and close.

Over a few further years I learned the two other important things that every anaesthetist must know.

Surgical textbooks always list causes of excessive bleeding during surgery. They include incompatible blood transfusion, massive transfusion, poor position, halothane, ether, patient too light, patient too deep, hypoxia, hypercarbia, straining, and so on. They never mention scalpels, tearing vessels or swabbing away clots.

In fact when a surgeon glares " Can you do anything about the bleeding?" the best reply is "Certainly, but who will mind the patient while I scrub?"

There is also a list of great surgical lies which every anaesthetist will recognise.

* "Put him to sleep, I'll be down in five minutes."

* "He is old but he is fit."

* "You will like her, she's an old dear."

* "I haven't cross matched blood, we don't need any."

* "Don't put a tube down, it's just a quick snatch."

* "I'm just going to open, have a look, and close her."

* "She will die if I do nothing."

* "I'll be finished in ten minutes."

Surgeons appreciate a reciprocal number of anaesthetics lies as they appreciate the law that fitness for surgery is universally proportional to time of day. And let surgeons beware when they hear:

* "The blood pressure is 123/72."

* "The patients is maximally relaxed and won't breathe for a week if I give any more."

* "It's not cyanosis, it's just the bloody lighting."

* "Don't go away, it will be two minute turn around."

The subliminal implication of the lies must be appreciated by both members of the relationship if they are to function in the best interest of the patient, and perhaps the greatest advantage of the lengthening postgraduate courses is to give fledgling surgeons and anaesthetists time to appreciate the idiosyncrasies of the other.

As another cynic said: " Anaesthesia is the half asleep watching the half awake being half murdered by the half-witted."

Only the other day when my colleague in the next theatre was complaining bitterly: "What can I do about my mother-in-law?" the surgeon withdrew his head from the thorax and snapped:

" Why not give her one of your anaesthetics""!!!

Sunday, February 22, 2015

Swastika's reception, German Club

Swastika is daughter of Laximikant Panigrahi, co-brother-in-law of Dr. Kiran Mishra.

Self with Sishir & Mohanty Babu from Jagatsinghpur in German Club

In connection with the marriage of Sishir's 'bhanaja' with Dr. Kiran Mishra's neice- his co-brother-in-law Laxmikant Panigrahi's daughter.

Saturday, February 21, 2015

With parents & professionals in HRB Clinic, IGH

Ipsita's wedding in Koelnagar

Ipsita is the daughter of Mrs. & Mr. Nalinikanta Nayak living in D-286 near our house.

Friday, February 20, 2015

Ipsita's marriage in Koelnagar Kalayan Mandap

Ipsita is the daughter of our neighbour Sri Nalinikanta Nayak in D-286.

Thursday, February 19, 2015

Swami Bhoomananda Anniversary

Vedvyas Ashram.

Swami Bhoomananda's anniversary in Gurukul Ashram, Vedvyas

Swami Bhoomananda's anniversary

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Pulse Diagnostics, Ispat Market

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Sivaratri today- Riki seeing a live webcast sitting on Mama

Sunday, February 15, 2015

Animesh's reception

Animesh is the son of Dr. Srdhananda & Dr. Mrs. Anupama Mohapatra

Annual Day - Vesaj Patel Hospital 2015

Annual Day lunch - Vesaj Patel Hospital 2015

CWS Hospital picnic- attending with friends & colleagues

Self with Dr. Arun Mohanty, Dr. KJ Jaiswal, Dr. Rohit Patel & Dr. Debashish Patnaik.

CWS Hospital picnic

Friday, February 13, 2015

Self with Rashmikant in Baleswar

Self with Gayatri

Bhujakhia Peera, Baleswar

Bhala Nani with # hd of femur lt

Sustained on 2nd Feb

Thursday, February 12, 2015

KC Tandi Dr.

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Dr. KB Das doing a burr-hole craniectomy for a pt of head injury in Hitech Medical College, Rourkela

Sunday, February 08, 2015

Mama back home from Kabita's place

Riki back in Rourkela after 21 days

She went home with her parents to take part in the funeral rites of her maternal grand father. Unfortunately her paternal grand mother passed away and all of them stayed in their native village in Dhenkanal.

Friday, February 06, 2015

Mama with Kabita in M11, Chhend

Mama came to 'Bhauja Parlour' for her haircut on 4th and may stay with her till Sunday.

Wednesday, February 04, 2015

Somi(Smruti)'s reception in Sector-9 Community Centre

Smruti, daughter of Mrs. Sabita & Dr. GN Sahu got married to Jaydev on 25th January in Bhubaneswar. The reception was hurriedly arranged in Rourkela today after their surprise arrival yesterday.

Sudha Nursing Home OT

Surgeons Dr. MR Dash, Dr. MS Sahoo & Dr. Verma

Sunday, February 01, 2015

Bhakua with Gauranga Babu & Gayatri

Gauranga Babu, Mantra & Gayatri