Understanding Surgery
239 pages
English

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239 pages
English

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Description

This book is a surgical text, not for the physicians but for the patients. It is a book that lets patients learn the questions to ask their surgeons. In addition, it becomes a must book for family members who need to know about the ramifications of undergoing surgery.

Dr. Berman makes surgery understandable and readable, and his book is undeniably informative and readable. It prepares the patients and family member in understanding what goes on in the operating room. What is a suture, what are drains, what are complications? Finally, how does one choose a surgeon?

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Publié par
Date de parution 21 février 2013
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780828322829
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0950€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Understanding Surgery
A Comprehensive Guide for Every Family
 
by
Dr. Joel Berman, M.D., F.A.C.S
 
Copyright 2011 Dr. Joel Berman,
All rights reserved.
 
 
Published in eBook format by Branden Books
Converted by http://www.eBookIt.com
 
 
ISBN-13: 978-0-8283-2282-9
 
 
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the author. The only exception is by a reviewer, who may quote short excerpts in a review.
 
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Berman, Joel A.
Understanding surgery: a comprehensive guide for every family / by Joel A. Berman.
p.cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8283-2061-6
1. Surgery—Popular works.
2. Surgery—History—Popular works.
I. Title.
 
RD31.3.B47 2001
617—dc21
2001018500
 

BRANDEN BOOKS
Division of Branden Publishing Co.
PO Box 812094
Wellesley MA 02482
 


To My Wife Andrea
 
and
 
To the Memory of My Father
 
Leon G. Berman, M.D., F.A.C.S.
 
A Skillful Surgeon, Compassionate Physician,
Teacher, Writer, Scholar,
and,
Eternal Student
 
 
Also By Joel Berman
 
FICTION
 
Circle in the Water
The Girl with Emerald Eyes
Scalpel
The Cloak of Hippocrates
A Few Loose Screws
 
NONFICTION
 
Comprehensive Breast Care
And Surviving Breast Cancer
Slave Labor
A Floating World
 


ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
 
I deeply appreciate the efforts of Adolfo Caso of Branden Books for his belief in my ability to write this book as well as my first book, Comprehensive Breast Care and Surviving Breast Cancer ; in today's publishing world, “It Ain't Easy To Get A Book Into Print!”
Although the writing of this book has been solely my effort, I have valued the comments and reviews of the following chapters by their respective specialists:
 
“Orthopedics” by Dr. Kenneth Kengla,
“Urology” by Dr. Melvin Novegrod,
“Gynecology” by Dr. Charles Moniak,
“Neurosurgery” by Dr. Abraham Rayhaun,
“Thoracic Surgery” by Dr. Santosh Mohanty,
“Cardiac Surgery” by Dr. Himmet Dajee,
“Plastic Surgery” by Dr. Malcolm Paul,
“Ophthalmic Surgery” by Dr. Mark Bronstein,
“Ear, Nose and Throat Surgery” by Dr. Douglas Tran,
“Pediatric Surgery” by Dr. Ali Kaviani.
 
The illustrations have been masterfully done by Faith and Adrian Van DeRee, and I am indebted to them for their comments and reading of the manuscript. The cover design was done by Danny Berman.
Wanda Atkinson and Lena Bodnar have extended themselves in the secretarial work needed for this project. I also would like to express my appreciation to Marissa Saplala for typing and proofing the manuscript, and Quan M. Nguyen for providing computer expertise.
And finally, to my wife Andrea Berman, RN, OCN for her constant support and encouragement during the many months of writing this book, I am again eternally grateful.
 
Joel A. Berman
M.D., F.A.C.S.


The purpose of human life is to serve and to show compassion and the will to help others.
 
Albert Schweitzer
 
PART I
 
Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION
I sat one day in the library and looked at a surgical text,
It weighed too much, had rarely been used,
and left me quite perplexed.
Now why in heaven would anyone want
to wade through all those pages?
It seemed so dull, though I must admit,
it was written by dozens of sages.
So I said to myself, I know what I'll do,
I'll write a book just plain and simple
Explaining to every man, woman and child
the art of removing a pimple.
Surely a book about cutting and sewing
would be to the layman's liking,
As long as the words were quite simple,
and the subject and writing were striking.
So here is the tome that I've written for you,
it's been more than a minuscule chore.
And if when you're through, you don't like it, don't tell me,
or I will be hurt to the core.
 
The major texts of surgery, written for students and physicians, are usually upwards of two thousand pages and filled with complex medical vocabulary, and this makes it all but impossible for the layman to understand the procedures and the bases for surgical practice. It is my intent to give a simplified but comprehensive presentation of surgery for the general populace.
The objectives will be to offer information and guidance to patients and family about the most common surgical procedures, which physicians have often failed to make sufficiently clear to those whom they are treating.
This is not a textbook for surgeons or students, but a guide for all individuals who want to understand the basics of surgery. While the focus will be primarily on what is called general surgery, I will also include sections on the most common sub-specialties, such as Vascular (dealing with blood vessels), Cardiac (heart surgery), Pediatrics, Orthopedics, Neurosurgery (Brain and spinal cord) and several others.
I am not interested in giving you only a reference text, but in presenting you with a pleasant read about the past, present and future of surgery, hopefully in such a way that it is not just filed away on a shelf, only to be used when one has a surgical problem or question. A study of the human body, its function, failings, and surgical correction can be fascinating, even exciting, when set forth in the appropriate way. I hope this book will let you marvel at the beauty, the complexity, and the ability of the human body to be repaired in the hands of the trained physician, and perhaps when you finish you may glean some of the fascination and excitement I have found in my day in and day out experience as a practicing surgeon.
 


Chapter 2
HISTORY OF SURGICAL PROCEDURES
When Will and Ariel Durant wrote their Story of Civilization
In thousands of pages and eleven large books, 'twas a massive publication
But using my art of brevity, I'll write this medical history, as I should,
And only use eight pages...’cause, damn’ I'm really good!
 
L et us look through a mythical telescope back to the earliest days of creation and see what we can conjure up about the ability of primordial creatures to take care of themselves. Imagine some slimy thing crawling across the ocean floor, getting bitten by another slimy thing or somehow becoming injured. Our little creature had two outlooks: dying or somehow repairing the damage and surviving, albeit probably for a shorter period of time. Now we can postulate that the repair took place, most assuredly without conscious understanding by Mr. Slime, either by secretion of some internal healing substance or by an instinctual reaction by the organism which caused it to repair the injury. Sound farfetched? Well, maybe, but this same process is going on millions and millions of years later throughout the animal kingdom of today. Creatures have some inherent ability to heal themselves without conscious awareness, and this type of healing has led to the eventual development of present day medicine and surgery. Big step in reasoning, you may say. Possibly, but it leads us to that day millions of years ago when man first became able to reason, even at the most fundamental level.
When a “lower” species was cut or injured, it depended on the body to heal itself. Blood flowed from a wound until the blood vessel went into spasm and allowed the coagulation system to form a clot. Then one day a primordial humanoid found he could stem the flow of blood by applying pressure to the bleeding site...and surgery was born! He then showed his discovery to his cohabitants, who showed it to their offspring, and so on through the ages.
The beast of the forest that injured itself and developed an abscess, somehow knew through instinct to chew upon the area until it opened and drained. Drainage, even today, is the treatment of an abscess or locked in infection. But it took the conscious intellectual human mind to look at the abscess on a limb and know that it must be poked with a sharp stick in order to drain and allow him to survive.
And because man could not understand the reasoning behind his sickness he probably attributed it to spirits, spells (put upon him by other people, animals or demons), or the unknown and thereby began to perform incantations along with his early surgical and medical exploits. So now let us put away this mythical scope and jump to the dawn of civilization. We know that, in ancient Peru, France, and Britain, human skulls have been discovered showing that trephining or trepanning was done, which consisted of making a one- to three-inch hole in the skull. This apparently allowed evil humors to get out, and scientists examining the skulls say that the “patient” often lived long after the procedure! This practice may still exist among some primitive peoples of the world. So we can look at aboriginal or South American tribal cultures and possibly see what the prehistoric or primitive man used for healing. This included vegetable drugs, binding wounds and removing foreign objects (such as sticks or arrows!), and also included charms, talismans and incantations. A great deal of early medicine was done by the “medicine men” and witch doctors with much of the result being the effect of fear or belief, such as we see in placebo effects even today.
Now, in reviewing medical and surgical history, there are great gaps highlighted by the masters of each age, usually individuals who collected the history of medicine to that date and wrote it down as their own treatise. Surgical care progressed very slowly over the early millennia and over the last several centuries. To give you a brief background of historical highlights is to give you the names of the individuals who made these compilations in the early periods and to note the innovators and geniuses of the last five hundred years who made the sentinel achievements whereby medicine and surgery took giant steps forward.
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