Archive for June, 2005
Raymond at LiveJournal
Posted by: | CommentsI have had a friendship develop with Raymond – a blogger at Livejournal – over the past year or so. His blog is very active and quite an interesting read. We found each other through our mutual interest in health care and specifically Nurse Anesthesia. Raymond sent me a comment on one of my posts about CRNA practice and we have been coresponding on an off since.
The two books that I recommend for anyone interested in Anesthesia are number one Ether Day by Fenster available at Amazon. The second book is called Watchful Care: A history of America’s Nurse Anesthetists by Marianne Bankert and is available through the AANA directly by calling them and placing an order. This book is highly recommended for those interested in the politics of health care and how this impacts the delivery of anesthesia today. The battle rages on.
Fathers Day Bicycle Ride
Posted by: | CommentsToday is Fathers day and for a treat the Monrovia Bicycle riders went on a little hill climb up through South Pasadena and into Montrose up over the Rose Bowl. Today is absolutely beautiful with the weather never better. If everyone could see how really wonderful the day is here in Southern California we would have a land rush. Really, this is one of the perfect days here.
We all started out at Stan’s Velo Monrovia Bicycle shop and headed toward South Pasadena. Greg and Pricilla are two of my good friends that I frequently ride with. Today was so wonderful. Everyone felt strong on the climbs and the temperature was perfect 72 degrees.
Stan Potts is the Grand Marshal of these rides which originate from his shop. He is quick to tell you that he is not sponsoring the rides for legal reasons but we all start from his front door.
The rides from the Velo Monrovia bicycle shop on Sundays have a standard type of route to a little coffee shop in South Pasadena. This short ride is about 12 or 14 miles to the rest stop and usually is pretty fast. Greg and I have a saying, “It’s all about the scone”. You see the coffee shop usually only has one of the cranberry scones and who ever gets there first gets the scone. You can see where this would put a little tempo into the ride which tends to be quick anyway. Greg rides a fixed gear single speed and can turn the peddles over at a good clip. Getting there before him is rare for me and only when he stops to help out a rider or slows down for his wife Pricilla. In the end we usually share the scone because they are a little large. This is what happened today.
One of the great things about riding with a group which I do on Sundays is that you meet really great people. Richard and I have been riding together now for a couple of years on the Sunday rides. In the past year or so he has really become a strong rider. Maybe it’s just the Asian thing but he hangs back and never blasts off of the front but he is capable of it. There was a Sunday several months back when he must have had too much Wheaties before the ride because he took off and no one could catch him. He was sitting at the rest stop drinking a cup of coffee when I finally rolled in. Richard is a great guy and today he was in really good riding form.
Another of the fellows that ride consistently with the group is Chis. About 6 months or so ago he built up the Merckx MX Leader frame. This is the steel bicycle of the famed Motorola Team. I really have bicycle envy over this frame. Chris is a very strong rider and is able to pull the group very quickly through the entire ride. He is very powerfully built and rides like a freight train. Keeping up with him is always a challenge. Today he kept the pace down and did a great job of keeping everyone on and the group together. Maybe some day I will be able to ride on of those frames that he is sporting now. Hmmmmm that is something to think about.
Finally I have included a picture of our leisurely rest stop. For the most part we stay here too long. Part of the reason is that we wait for the stragglers and we all leave together so it makes for a long break. After the rest stop the group breaks up into 2 or sometimes three different rides. Today the total group was small because of Fathers day. A lot of people were away out of town with family commitments I guess. Anyway, our small group of maybe 7 riders took off after the rest stop for some climbing up through Montrose above the Rose Bowl. The climb was really a good one and toward the top I was wondering where I could get a lower gear as I was standing the last hundred yards or so. All in all there were three climbs with maybe up to 800 feet or so of total elevation rise. That is not too much really just enough to let you know that you were up something. The weather was perfect and the temperature mild so the climbs were not difficult as far as heat is concerned. Just a perfect day.
This afternoon I received calls from the children, my daughter Elyse and son Joel. Actually they both called at very similar times. Talking to Joel who now lives in New York was a treat. We talked about the entire goings on there in the Village and the craziness that is New York. I lived there on the Lower West Side during my early childhood years and remember the place well. Elsye has been busy with work for the Ventura County and these past few days have been down with a touch of food poisoning. Yuckkkkk. We will get together next weekend for sure – that’s the story and I am sticking to it. All in all it has been a great Fathers Day. You can tell from my smile.

Vincent Van Gogh Still Life
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Here is one of Van Goghs still life pictures that I find very unusual. The entire collection of his work can be purchased in CD from from the Vincent Van Gogh museum:

The best of the Van Gogh paintings, in my opinion are some of these studies in still life. I have one of these prints hanging in our house. It is always a marvel to me the boldness of Van Gogh’s strokes and the genious of his work.

Friday at LAC-USC
Posted by: | CommentsWhat a great break for me – I get to go to the LAC-USC hospital for a day in the OR. After calling and getting the assignment this afternoon I called my great friend Charlotte Garcia who I will be training with at Women’s and Children’s tomorrow. I will be doing GYN at the County in the morning and will first attend the weekly conference which I have missed for the past month and one half.
I am so excited to be able to go and see my friends and practice some great anesthesia. Charlotte is really “the Bomb” when it comes to providing sound safe anesthetic for her patients. It is always a great treat to work with her and learn a few of her tricks. She text messaged me the other day “pimping” me about the relative histamine release between morphine and meperidine. It took me several hours and a lot of searching before I think I found the right answer. Both of these medications are histamine releasers but I believe morphine is more. So what did I do, I fired back a question to her about meperidine. We just had the pain lecture with Dr. Berger and he showed us diagrams of all of the receptors that are involved in nociception. One of the receptors that meperidine works at is the NMDA receptor which is one of the modulators of pain in the periphery.
In the morning I am taking my camera so that I can post some pictures of my day at Women’s and Children’s hospital. It has been a while since I have done anything with the camera and I am looking forward to doing this very much.
Sixteen Hours in the OR
Posted by: | CommentsThis past Friday and Saturday morning I have spent in the County Hospital operating room providing anesthesia to the never ending trauma cases that come in over a weekend. Maybe it’s just me but the natives are too restless it seems especially when you combine alcohol and illicit drugs to the mix.
The last two cases were really special. One a stab wound to the face and the second a gun shot wound to a very drunk mans leg. The stab wound case was technically difficult to secure the women’s airway due to so much bleeding from her cheek and tongue laceration. Really it was more of a HUGE laceration. Her domestic partner, I believe, thought that she was stealing all of his cocaine or crystal meth or what ever and thought to teach her a little lesson. The stab wound went through her cheek and tongue to the other side of the face. You can imagine that there was a lot of blood in her airway. The lady was pretty hysterical and we just induced her (put her to sleep) quickly while she was sitting up on the gurney. After unconsciousness the attending anesthesiologist and I laid her down quickly while the surgeon held some pressure to her cheek. Two suction catheters going and ten seconds later she was intubated and her airway was secure. After that it was simple. I am really glad that the Attending was there to help out. Now that is not something you see everyday. The surgery was fairly straight forward and we left her intubated overnight to make sure the bleeding was under control and her airway was secure.
The next guy had the rudeness to try for another six pack at closing time at the local drive through liquor store at 01:50 in the morning. Evidently there was an altercation of some sort, who knows what really happened here because the guy was so drunk and combative. He can to us in the OR at about 3:30 in the morning just after we had finished up with the younger lady and the stab wound to the face. I could not even close my eyes for a couple of minutes. This guy was really out there jumping all over the place. We could hardly keep him on the gurney let alone transfer him to the OR table. After 10 milligrams of midazolam he saw it our way and we were able to get him to the operating room table and start the case. He ended up with facsiotomies of his calves and some vascular reconstruction. All this for another beer. Seems like to me he had had enough but who would have thunk it.
All in all doing a clinical rotation in a large county hospital and being able to take weekend call time shifts is a great clinical experience. There are things here that you see and do that are not available at other times. The lack of sleep is not something that I cherish but I would not trade the chance to do this rotation. I will be at this facility for another three months and will be taking overnight call once a week in addition to the regular days during the week that I am there.
The routine week day cases are fairly standard type cases. The obstetric floor is covered by the student nurse anesthetists as well and we see a fairly large population of caesarean sections, tubal ligations, and labor epidural placement management type things. So the mix of cases here is really nice. Right now I will catch up on some sleep and then hit the books for an exam that is coming this Monday.




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Sherlock Holmes