4.09.2011

Mile 18039: Candid Camera

Above: Streaks of sky light up Covington, Ohio during a brisk March sunset.

I LOVE SEEING LESSONS COME
FULL-CIRCLE.

This week, I had an opportunity to guide the camera behind a laparascopic procedure. I enjoyed being behind it for once, pulling in and swiping across the abdomen to make sure the surgeon covered all the ground he needed to cover. When I was in Dominica, I had written about how surgeons and their assistants start to have this way of "hidden" communication. I've worked with one surgeon for the past week, and I'll admit the first time I assisted, it was like trying to teach a kid to bike without training wheels. Fortunately, I had a patient attending, so by the second time around, I started to get some of the gist of what the surgeon was going for.

For those of you not familiar with laparoscopy, the jist of it basically comes down to a fiber-optic camera (don't think of a lens-faced camera, but a camera in the a shape of a long-thin pole). Many surgical procedures in the abdomen in the past used to be conducted by cutting through the front part of the stomach wall, and when the surgery was over, a big scar would be left across the abdomen. Things are different with laparoscopy, a couple of port holes for instruments and the camera itself are poked in, leaving only a few small scars after surgery. It's much more cosmetically beneficial.

And here I was, keeping my eye on the plasma screens, on the scope, being the surgeon's eyes, and kinda like his brain (most of the time). And soon, the surgery was over. I was soon assisting in my first sutures, and I'll admit that its gonna take practice to get the art down of beating the "anesthesia clock." Basically, suturing up surgical openings is harder when the patient starts to breathe on their own and get active as they wake up from being asleep during the surgery. However, the thrill of jumping in to try things out is definitely there.

And, although my primary intention is still to go into primary care, I'll admit, Surgery so far has been a blast.

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