Saturday, August 27, 2011

Blood

I've seen a lot of it these past couple of weeks, as I've started my first surgical rotation. I remember I was fairly opposed to the idea of going down the path of doing surgery, for a variety of reasons - including rather pragmatic and practical reasons, down to the more medically related and life-path incompatibility that doesn't mesh well with a surgical career. However, I've vowed to myself to always remain open-minded and liberal to all persuasion relating to my medical career, so in I went.

So, what can I say? Well, for all you budding surgeons out there, I can tell you that surgery is what you imagine it to be - and more. My friends have said that surgery is really a "see it once, you know it all" thing - but I don't know if they are the owner of laser-sharp eyesight and a photographic memory, because I certainly can't see how I would know the procedure based on one scrub-in alone. I'll take the example of a laparoscopic cholecystectomy (aka the "lap chole", chole pronounced coh-li - you can Google what this procedure is), the bread and butter of general surgery, which by the way is not really general so much as abdominal. In one week, I saw two standard lap choles, two complicated lap choles with abnormal anatomy, and what amounted to removing an acute gallbladder - a massively inflamed gallbladder filled with stones and what appeared to be lots of gunk (a non-medical term, by the way). Each one was different, and each one was a learning experience for everyone involved - or those who were watching, anyway.

Amongst other operations I witnessed included hernia repairs (one of which was complicated and turned into open surgery), an abdominal defect repair (technically a hernia, once again, you can Google the type of hernias), and a laparotomy combined with a hemicolonectomy (open abdominal surgery, with the removal of half of the colon). The variety of operations combined with the sharp learning curve, the number of complications and variations, and even the organisational side (anaesthetics and operating theatre nurses) really broke the image I had of surgery being a rather repetitive job. When you then take into account the invariable changes in technology (laparascopic technology being quite a recent advance in general surgery, requiring surgeons to re-learn the procedure of gallbladder removal again), I think it's fair enough to say that the operating side of surgery will remain fascinating and challenging for at least as long, if not more, than the tasks of being a physician, radiologist or pathologist.

The other side to surgery was the pre and post-operation care of the patient. The ward rounds for our surgical team inevitably clocked in at under an hour, with many patients being seen for five minutes or less. When thinking about the ward rounds of the medical teams (generally lasting anywhere from 2-4 hours, but in some unfortunately busy teams, up to 6-7 hours), the difference was really quite stark. I found myself knowing little about the patients under our team unless I took the time outside of ward rounds and attending surgery to see them, besides what they came in for - and this disappointed me. I was somewhat pacified when one of my friends who is on our team (our team composes of the surgeons, a surgical registrar, a resident/intern and three medical students) sat in on one of our surgeon's clinics, held once a fortnight - there, the personal side of pre and post-operative care apparently flourished, so I am looking forward to attending later on in the rotation.

I also got the impression that surgeons knew pretty much everything about the medical side of their specialty. I don't know if it's just my registrar, who is brilliant and keen on teaching us, but he seems to know everything in the domain of the gastrointestinal physician, in addition to the detailed anatomy and procedural skills necessary - it overwhelms me when I think of how many hours they study...and then I think about how much I study right now, haha...

So I'll be back after my surgical rotations for another update, and then it's exam time! More fun and games for all, yay...