Liberia #19

Liberia #19

First I want to thank you all for praying for me. And please continue.

I dream of (miss):

How many times have you been in a pool and thought, wow seems like they put to much chlorine in here! I sense that on a regular basis here. If I touch a patient, I wash with chlorine afterwards. If I had a bare hand, rare, then I wash my hand. If I have gloves on, usual, then I wash my gloves. I smell like chlorine all the time, it covers up my BO from sweating profusely.

Ive decided my favorite meal is falafel sandwich! I don’t eat it often, but when I do get a chance to have it- IT IS AMAZING! Second is lentils. Because you can cook them and they have a decent taste by themselves, and you can eat them for many meals afterwards. PB and J sandwiches are the next most common. Tasty but predictable.

I long to be with my wife! Im missing her a lot and having your best friend to hang out with and discuss things with, you realize is so important, and you realize it most when it cant happen.

Cold! I want to be cold. To feel chilly or down right cold. When I can wear lots of cloths and still not be sweating. Wear normal operation room attire and not be dripping from my eyebrows and wonder if it will fall on the patient or off the side towards me.

Be back with my OR staff that appreciate sterility like I do and watch out for it and expect it. To have staplers to do anastomoses and close skin with. A 15 min or less intestinal anastomosis in stead of an hour! An OR staff that doesn’t complain when the day goes past 4PM. A cautery cord that is truly sterile! Gloves that fit and are thick enough to not rip if touched by tape. Orders that are followed in the chart. Medicines that are given when ordered and given correctly in dosing, time and frequency.

Nurses that know how to put in a urinary catheter in a sterile way. And know not to blow up the balloon in the urethra. I’ve delt with that 4 times now. (can cause lifetime stricture and difficulty peeing).

Someone else to deal with sick children! They generally are rather resistant. But when they crash, they die quick. And the correct dose of medicine is SO important, the smaller they are.

I miss sitting by the front window in the morning having my own devotions with my wife near by, or the dog trying to sit on my lap.

So I’m enjoying the variety of surgery that third world surgery offers, but miss many important things.

Liberia #17

Liberia #17

Me an anesthetist or anesthesiologist? I can do it, if need be. I’ve decided after yesterday that I don’t like it! The other end of the patient is much more interesting and my preference.

It was Friday and I did part of the rounds as usual. Some getting better some staying the same, none died overnight. I’m am called to go outside to see a sick person in a car that they say has liver cirrhosis. I take about 30 minutes to finish what Im doing. Then head outside. The people milling about indicate the car. I peer into the back seat to see an old man laying still on the seat. He doesn’t breath. I think he is dead. I put a gloved hand on his neck, no pulse, he’s already dead. They said when they were coming in that he was breathing, very slowly. I call the burial team to do their assessment. They will come and do their assessment, then decide whether to take the body and cremate it due to Ebola risk or let the family take him to a funeral home.

A 40 year old woman has had a chest tube in for weeks, with pus draining out. The tube fell out a few days ago. There was remaining fluid and air in the chest outside the lung, and a trapped lung. Dr. Seton decided to open the chest to clean out what she can, and asks me do the anesthesia. I do not know the gas dosing of isoflurane that is available here or how to run the machine. She doesn’t think it will take but about an hour, so I decide to use Ketamine. An aid in the OR places a second IV line. I give the antibiotic, anti-nausea, and IV fluids. Then the Ketamine IM and some IV. The patient is asleep and breathing on their own. Dr. Seton preps and drapes the left back. She makes an incision and after some dissection, is into the lung space. Pus and rotten tissue is found. She plucks out chunks of rotten stuff and the stench in the room is significant. She decides to resect a rib and leave the space open so it will drain adequately. She does find a small area with lung, but most is just fibrous tissue and cannot be removed safely. From an anesthetic standpoint, the patient does great under Ketamine. There is no family around to watch the patient, so I keep her in the OR off to the side to watch her. Rather than delay further, early afternoon, I have them bring the next patient in. So I will keep an eyeball on one while giving anesthesia to the other.

The next on was in a motor vehicle accident more than a week ago and likely has an open fracture of her left elbow (humerus, radius and ulna). There are about three flexible areas in the arm where one should be. After Ketamine and other premedications, Dr. Seton explores the area and finds no discernable opening to the bones. So she does a dressing and the makes a splint out of plaster of paris. Then wait about 30 minutes for it to set up.

Eventually a family member arrives for surgery #1 and so we wheel her back to her room.

At about 4PM, the guy with the posterior dislocation of his knee for one month, and open fracture, refuses to come to the OR till his brother is there to sign. He initially went to the largest hospital in mid December, and was turned away, that they were only dealing with Ebola care at that time. So has been having he leg dressed at some clinic for the past month. He’s been to a number of other hospitals too, all of which are full or not doing non-ebola care. I wish he had been here at that time. Drs. Seton and Saunders could have delt with it much better at that time. Now there will be much scar tissue. So the second off the list. We’ve already cancelled a breast cancer today when it was so late. She will be done next week, and I guess this guy will be as well, continuing dressing changes as it has been done for the past month.

The woman to evaluate is about 40. She has had abdominal pain for about 3 weeks. Now on ultrasound by Dr Seton, it appears that she has a ruptured appendix with an abscess. She’s also had nausea, but denies vomiting, but hasn’t eaten much in many days. She’s a bit distended. Dr. Seton feels that she can stay low on the abdomen, so we decide on doing a spinal. I pre-treat the patient with about a liter of IV fluids, then prep the back after marking my injection site. Using a sterile technique, I insert the spinal needle low in the back at the appropriate angle. With a few inward adjustments, there is clear spinal fluid. I inject the long acting spinal anesthetic. She lays back. By the time Dr. Seton is ready to cut, she cannot feel anything below her upper abdomen and is breathing fine. As Dr. Seton enters the abdomen, the firm area is found and appears to be stuck to the colon on the right side and the left. She opens, the abscess and finds thick mucus. A mucocele of the appendix? After further investigation she palpates some enlarged nodes, so a mucinous cancer seems more likely. It is also attached to the abdominal wall. So resect or leave it and give her an ostomy. The decision is made to resect, giving her the longest chance of survival. Other than local nodes, no other signs of metatasis are seen or felt. Now we are in for the long haul. And now Dr. Seton needs to go higher. The patient starts feeling pain. Then retching. Liters of feculent smelling materials come out of her mouth, pooling around her neck and dripping off the table. The room wreaks. Im glad that she is fully awake, and she hasn’t aspirated, she doesn’t even cough once, vomiting laying on her back! I place an NGT and withdraw 2-3 more liters using a 60ml syringe. The suction they cannot seem to get connected to work properly at the moment, and when they do, it doesn’t draw out any, so I continue with the syringe. Since she is having pain, I start ketamine, and also want to protect her airway, so I intubate her. I breath a short prayer for guidance and insert it without difficulty, Praise GOD! Will Ketamine keep her going long enough? I believe so, I’ve done a number of hours in Cameroon under Ketamine. I give it to her in the muscle and in the IV. I also put her on the ventilator, once I figure out how to make it run. It is a strange combination, a ventilator and ketamine. But the dosing of isoflurane, or even if it is in the machine, I cannot tell. So I stick with what I know. Now that there is airway control and NGT evacuated her stomach. I wish I had the anesthetist I work with here! Dr. Seton also says it invades the abdominal wall. So after about 4 hours of working on the patient, the cancer is out. Two anastomosis need to be done. Each of these take about an hour, using the hand sewn technique. Not intestinal staplers here! At the end of the surgery, the patient is breathing on her own, and the stomach is empty. I take out the breathing tube and watch her for a half hour. She remains stable. I get to bed about 1AM. Long day! I do my bucket bath in the water we have, cold. And go to bed fairly wet. Hopefully to keep me cool enough to sleep quickly before I finish evaporating.

Liberia #18

Liberia #18

A mid 50’s European man comes in with hiccups.  They have been to a variety of places today trying to get him placed in a hospital.  The man has had hiccups for about a month.  He says they are worse at night, almost stopping his breath.  He is well educated and doing some teaching here.  He’s been treated for malaria, and denies any other symptoms other than being weak.  I talk to his European boss with him and admit him. His fever is very high at 40.1C about 104F.  As I walk him upstairs my differential gets larger.  Is ebola a possibility?  Fever and hiccups.  Doesn’t meet criteria.  He has denied all other symptoms and contact with anyone sick.  His exam is not specific at all, eyes injected?  I know the rate in the country is getting lower.  Apparently the only area with new cases are near the Sierra Leone boarder, and last week there were only a few reported cases.  I wonder if these are realistic numbers.  As the nurses start he IV I ask them to take the necessary precautions.  I also inform the patient of my concern and that they will be gowned up.  I will check labs, and recheck him in a couple hours when his fever has broken.  So though it is much less common now than a few months ago, it is still in the back of all of our minds.

A little while later a European military ER doc comes to see me and ask about him.  I explain the symptoms he portrays and he decides to evaluate him in his mother tongue.  After that, he concurs that the risk of this being Ebola is very low.  At least I have a second opinion now.  Have I mentioned, I like surgery a LOT better than general medicine!

I’ve made rounds on everyone.  Apparently the nurses do not do dressing changes.  When the OR team is here, they will do simple ones, but none today, Sabbath.  So I do all the dressing changes too.   Just as I am ready to do the dressing change of the 10 year old boy with burns, the nurse asks me to see him.  He is laying still without breathing and without a heart beat.  I start CPR, copious fluids come out his mouth and nose.  They bring me a bag and mask, we give some medicines and continue CPR.  I realize it is futile and stop.  Did he get an overdose of pain medicine? Aspirate his food?  So many questions, and no answers.  I suspect overdose.  I look for the reversal medicine in the “crash cart bucket”, pharmacy and downstairs storage.  No one has heard of the medicine I ask for.  I think I will prescribe differently here, from now on.  We have been avoiding intramuscular injections, but I think it is harder to overdose intramuscular, so may go that route, or avoid it all together.  Another old man is breathing slow after his pain medicine, I can wake him up.  He got twice the dose that I ordered.  There really isn’t an explainable reason from the administering nurse, I wrote for the lower dose, it was put in nurses medications as the lower dose, but both of these were ignored and the full dose was given.

I go and check on another patient that I asked for a foley to be placed who has been unconscious since admission.  To much of the foley catheter seems to be hanging out.  I palpate and can feel the balloon, mid urethra, blood is in the tubing.  I get all the required materials.  I remove the previous foley and reinsert another.  It finds a false tract and curls in the urethra.  I try a variety of foleys and still none pass.  He doesn’t have a distended bladder so I leave him without.  If necessary I will place a suprapubic catheter.

The military doc returns with a portable EKG machine.   Great! Does an EKG and it shows sinus tachycardia (fast normal rhythm).  We exchange phone numbers, and he offers to have me call if I have any questions or problems.  I find out that their ETU (ebola treatment unit) is closing because of lack of patients.  It will reopen as a severe infection temporary treatment unit.  Good news on the ebola front and also a place to send other severe infections or patients.  May open in 2-3 weeks.  They will even have some ICU capabilities and be run by infectious disease doctors.  Seems like a reasonable move forward.

“Doc, Ext bed 4 no pee pee.”  I know him as the one I did bilateral hernia repairs on a couple days ago and his catheter fell out this morning.  Since then he has been unable to void and is in pain.  So I gather the equipment and head down there.  I place the catheter and get more than half a liter of urine.  He is relieved.  Again I could only get in one without a balloon, so I tape it every which way to hope to keep it in place.  I’m skeptical, but if he can make it through the night at least.