Algeria.com Discussion Forum - Powered by vBulletin


+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 3 of 3
  1. #1
    Al-khiyal is online now Super Moderator
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Posts
    289,621

    Surgeon carries out amputation by text


    December 3, 2008 -- A British surgeon volunteering in the Democratic Republic of Congo saved the life of a teenage boy by amputating his shoulder using instructions texted by a colleague in London.

    David Nott, 52, a general and vascular surgeon at Chelsea and Westminster hospital, was working with the charity Médecins sans Frontières (MSF) in the town of Rutshuru when he came across the badly injured 16-year-old in October.

    The teenager's left arm had been so badly damaged - either in an accident or as a result of the fighting between Congolese and rebel troops - that it had already had to be amputated. But the flesh and bone that remained had become badly infected and gangrenous.

    "He was dying" said Nott. "He had about two or three days to live."

    The doctor realised the boy's best chance of survival was a forequarter amputation which requires the surgeon to remove the collar bone and shoulder blade. The only problem was that it was an operation Nott had never performed. But he remembered that one of his colleagues at home had carried out the procedure.

    "I texted him and he texted back step-by-step instructions," he said.

    "Even then I had to think long and hard about whether it was right to leave a young boy with only one arm in the middle of this fighting.

    "But in the end he would have died without it, so I took a deep breath and followed the instructions to the letter."

    Such an operation, if performed in the UK, would require careful planning with every sort of modern medical product on hand if things went wrong.

    But in Congo Nott had just one pint of blood and an elementary operating theatre.

    Despite the basic conditions, the operation was a success and the teenager made a full recovery.

    More than 5 million people have been killed in Congo since the early 1990s when the Rwandan genocide spread into what was then Zaire.

  2. #2
    amalgamate is offline Registered User
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Posts
    1,863
    wow ... the art of improvising
    It seems as if one fails to conceive
    The meaning my name strives to achieve

    To a biological form you cannot relate-
    Because a reproductive cell is a gamete not gamate!

    It means to unite, -to become consolidated
    So without me in a.com, is there hope we'd be amalgamated?


  3. #3
    Cheba_Mami is offline Moderator
    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Posts
    2,124
    excellent use of modern techniques

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts