Tag Archives: surgery

Surgical Errors Now Topping $1.5 Billion


Surgical errors are of the most costly nature. While the $1.5 billion figure is an astounding one and has a great effect on the medical industry, it is nothing compared to the impact of surgical errors on the patients themselves. And the bottom line is that the number can and should be reduced.

According to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), a division of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (HHS), employers pay nearly $1.5 billion each year for medical errors that occur during or after surgery; errors that could be potentially preventable. The study was authored by William E. Encinosa, Ph.D. and Fred J. Hellinger, Ph.D., both employed by ARQ, and was published in the July issue of the Health Services Research journal……read more here

Surgeon sued for giving anesthetized patient temporary tattoo


Surgeon sued for giving anesthetized patient temporary tattoo

In a lawsuit filed yesterday, a Camden County woman accused her orthopedic surgeon of “rubbing a temporary tattoo of a red rose” on her belly while she was under anesthesia.

The patient discovered the tattoo below the panty line the next morning, when her husband was helping her get dressed to go home after the operation for a herniated disc, her attorney, Gregg A. Shivers, said in a phone interview yesterday.

“She was extremely emotionally upset by it,” said Shivers. The suit, filed on behalf of Elizabeth Mateo in Camden County Superior Court, seeks punitive and compensatory damages from Steven Kirshner, a board-certified orthopedic surgeon with offices in Marlton and Lumberton, both in Burlington County.

Kirshner does not deny placing the tattoo – and has left washable marks on patients before to improve their spirits, his lawyer, Robert Agre of Haddonfield, said last night. He said none has complained.

“What’s offensive about this complaint is that it suggests something he did was intended to be prurient, and nothing could be further from the truth,” said Agre. “It was intended just to make the patient feel better.”

Nevertheless, said Art Caplan, chairman of the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine’s Department of Medical Ethics, “you cannot do something like this even as a joke.”

“If it’s true,” said Caplan, whose knowledge of the case was limited to a reporter’s summary, “she’s got a case.”….read rest of story here.

Inca Brain Surgeons Did Great 600 years ago


Scott Norris
for National Geographic News
May 12, 2008
Inca Surgeons Highly Skilled

Inca surgeons in ancient Peru commonly and successfully removed small portions of patients’ skulls to treat head injuries, according to a new study.

The surgical procedure—known as trepanation—was most often performed on adult men, likely to treat injuries suffered during combat, researchers say.

A similar procedure is performed today to relieve pressure caused by fluid buildup following severe head trauma.

Around the ancient Inca capital of Cuzco (see Peru map), remains dating back to A.D. 1000 show that surgical techniques were standardized and perfected over time, according to the report.

Many of the oldest skulls showed no evidence of bone healing following the operation, suggesting that the procedure was probably fatal.

But by the 1400s, survival rates approached 90 percent, and infection levels were very low, researchers say.

The new findings show that Inca surgeons had developed a detailed knowledge of cranial anatomy, said lead author Valerie Andrushko, of Southern Connecticut State University in New Haven.

“These people were skilled surgeons,” she said.

Beer, Plants Aided Patients

Inca healers carefully avoided areas of the skull where cutting would be more likely to cause brain injury, bleeding, or infection, Andrushko noted.

The operations were conducted without the modern benefits of anesthesia and antibiotics, but medicinal plants were probably used, she said.

“They were aware of the medicinal properties of many wild plants, including coca and wild tobacco,” Andrushko said.

“These, along with maize beer, may have been used to alleviate some of the pain.

“Natural antiseptics such as balsam and saponins [plants with soaplike properties] may have reduced the likelihood of infection following trepanation,” she added.

The new study was recently published online in The American Journal of Physical Anthropology….. Read Rest of Story Here

Cheerleader’s death highlights rare risk


Cheerleader’s death highlights rare risk-

High school senior dies after undergoing cosmetic breast surgery

By Mike Celizic
TODAYShow.com contributor
updated 7:19 a.m. PT, Wed., March. 26, 2008

Stephanie Kuleba’s friends called her “Sunshine” because that was the perfect nickname for the outgoing and bubbly girl who was everybody’s friend, the cheerleader with the near-perfect grade-point average who was too nice and too perfect for anybody to resent.

“She was just the kind of girl that everyone loved,” a friend, Dayna Mercer, told NBC News. “There was nothing bad about her.”

But the 18-year-old high school senior, who was headed to college and then medical school, felt she needed to be even more perfect. Her breasts were asymmetrical and she had an inverted areola, so she went to an outpatient cosmetic surgery clinic in Boca Raton, Fla., to have what she saw as a problem attended to by doctors.

And now she’s dead.

She died Sunday, 24 hours after undergoing surgery, the victim of an extremely rare reaction to anesthesia called malignant hyperthermia.

Usually genetic and very difficult to detect, the condition causes the body temperature to spike as high as 112 degrees and salts to precipitate out of the blood. If the reaction is not recognized almost immediately and an antidote given, it is fatal.

The death has focused attention on elective breast augmentation surgery, a procedure that 347,500 women of all ages chose to have in 2007 alone. That number is 6 percent higher than in 2006 and 64 percent higher than in 2000.

Although the FDA recommends that only women 18 or older get breast implants, the number of girls under that age submitting themselves to the surgery continues to grow. In 2005, the last year for which full statistics are available, more than 3,500 girls had breast implants.

But Dr. Richard D’Amico, the president of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, told TODAY’s Matt Lauer on Wednesday that what happened to Kuleba could happen to anyone.

“This young lady’s death is a tragedy. Our hearts go out to her family. It’s a devastating event,” he said. But, he added, “this is something that can happen in any surgery, on any part of the body, in any setting.”

D’Amico encountered it once during what should have been routine nasal surgery on a male patient. He said he was lucky; his anesthesiologist immediately recognized the signs of malignant hyperthermia and took remedial action quickly enough to save the man’s life.

“There’s a medication for this that needs to be given very quickly, which was done,” D’Amico said.

The problem is that there’s no easy way to identify people who are at risk of the syndrome.

“Most often, there isn’t a clue,” he said. “The only test to predict it, you’d have to cut out some muscles from a leg and there’s only five places in the country that can do this.”

Kuleba’s family, who did not wish to be interviewed, has hired an attorney to investigate the death. The doctor who performed the surgery, Dr. Steven Schuster, also declined to comment.

D’Amico repeated the FDA recommendation that no one under 18 undergo breast augmentation surgery. Despite its popularity, the procedure does have a high rate of complications and often requires additional surgery within five to 10 years of the original surgery.

“The development of the breast is a very sensitive issue with young women and very important to them,” D’Amico said.

He recommended that anyone contemplating any cosmetic procedure seek out a board-certified plastic surgeon in a big clinic with a good reputation. But, he warned, as Kuleba’s case so sadly emphasizes, no surgery is completely safe.

“There’s never no risk,” he said. “Our job is to minimize that risk, and we stay up very late to do that.”

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Diabetes Bad For Blood Vessels


Diabetes Makes It Hard For Blood Vessels To Relax

ScienceDaily (2008-02-01) — One way diabetes is bad for your blood vessels is by creating too much competition for an amino acid that helps blood vessels relax, researchers say. That amino acid, L-arginine, is broken down by the enzyme arginase to urea, which helps the body eliminate toxins resulting from the proteins we eat. Arginase also is associated with vascular problems related to aging, hypertension, sickle cell disease, atherosclerosis and erectile dysfunction. … > read full article