Archive for the ‘Ruptured uterus’ Category

WOMEN SHOULD NOT DIE GIVING LIFE!

Monday, February 8th, 2010

“Women should not die giving life!” A statement in a referral letter from one of our satellite clinics in which I can only agree.

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That is also the “Millennium Goal” of WHO and other fancy international agencies.

But as top politicians and highly paid “experts” are consuming billions of dollars on high salaries, expensive secretaries, cars, business class, 5 star hotels and restaurants and not contributing with anything else but talking, we - the medical professionals in the third world - are fighting day and night to accomplish concrete results in spite of having nothing except our hands to work with.

The poorly paid, but dedicated (male) nurse who wrote the line quoted above is struggling day and night in a clinic with no resources, no equipment, insufficient financial support, no running water or electricity. In spite of that he is doing his very best to help the patients. At times things are just too complicated and luckily he (still) has a hospital to refer to.

In the referral letter mentioned he writes that the woman is referred from his clinic at 10 pm.

At 4 am the lady arrived at Aira Hospital in shock due to intraabdominal bleeding and sepsis from a ruptured uterus. It took 6 hours to carry her to the hospital and during that time the uterus gave up and ruptured. Why didn’t the family take her by car? Well it takes 2 hours’ walk to reach the main road, and how many cars are out there in the middle of the night? A part from that they might not have been able to pay the usually indecent demands from the car owners.

She was operated immediately after arrival. Thanks to a dedicated staff who bothers and are ready to work and save lives 24 hours around the clock. Not a given option in many other hospital where the staff would rather choose to neglect her and give priority to a sound sleep.

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She recovered fast, as her two roommates who also came with ruptured uterus. One from nearby Guliso had to pay 300 birr to get a car ride (ordinary price 20 birr), but then she walked herself from the parking place to the maternity – with a ruptured uterus!

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The third woman had paid 700 birr for a place in a car. Far more than the cost for the lifesaving hospital treatment. All three patients with uterine rupture are recovering fast. That means a lot.

Saving the life of a mother saves the whole family.

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Then why is it considered so wrong by so many NGOs to support this kind of medical work financially?

Even our own Church of Sweden Mission does not consider medical work as their responsibility.

Women’s’ project – YES. Human rights project – YES. AIDS/HIV project – YES.

Medical work (apart from AIDS/HIV) - NO.

Recently the Church of Sweden Mission donated a second hand car to the women’s’ project in Addis Abeba (where there are so many cars at the head office that they are standing rusting in the parking lot) and one to the Bible Seminary in Nekemte. With all due respect it is indisputable that no of the women’s worker or the bible school students die from lack of transport, but our patients do.

Imagine how many lives could be saved, and how much suffering could be avoided if the hospital had a four wheel car which could bring women with complicated deliveries to the hospital at a reasonable fare. In that way the patients would not be skinned to the bones by greedy car owners, and the hospital would have at least some sort of income. Will that dream ever become true?

 

SUNDAY SUNDAY

Monday, January 18th, 2010

Sunday is supposed to be the day of rest. Not so in Aira Hospital. People need surgery even on Sundays and holidays – night and day all around the clock.

As you can see from the book we keep in the operating theatre there were 9 emergency surgeries during Sunday.

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Six were complicated deliveries: a retained twin B (first baby born at home – second baby retained in the womb), a risk mother with two no children alive after 2 previous stillbirth and two cesareans, a breech presentation in a primigravida (first time pregnancy), a twin pregnancy with a shoulder presentation of twin A (the first twin), a face presentation and a ruptured uterus.

(Aira is not considered a project with “focus on mother & child health”?).

Besides all these complicated deliveries a sigmoid volvolus, an open tibia fracture and a stab wound of the abdomen was operated as well.

For the gender conscious 7 women and 2 men were operated.

The lady with the ruptured uterus had 5 home deliveries before, two still birth and three alive.

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Now with the sixth delivery the uterus ruptured, a complication which was totally impossible to prevent with “preventive antenatal care” and totally impossible to foresee. 

The lady recovered fast and was on her feet already the day after surgery, just like an ordinary cesarean.

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The patient with the open tibia fracture was referred from another hospital 3 hours by car from Aira. But to reach the referring hospital she had to be carried 4 hours.

You don’t need to be a professor in trauma and orthopedics to make the diagnosis and the treatment is straight forward: revision of the wound, reduction of the fracture and fixation with intramedullary flexible nails.

At the international meeting in Jena I was challenged when showing pictures of similar cases. Many colleagues questioned intramedullary nailing in open fractures with or without infected wounds. In our hands it works perfectly all right, and without blushing I will claim that we do not see any draw backs or complications from that treatment policy.

That lady was also on her feet the day after surgery. We wanted to discharge her, but as she will have to walk or be carried 4 hours from the last bus stop we gave her one day more to prepare the transport.

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The last patient late that evening was an unfortunate fellow, a good man who tried to mediate between two hotheads only to be stabbed in the abdomen himself. That resulted in eventration and multiple perforations of the small intestine.

Ingratitude is the reward of this world!

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Also he was on the feet the following day.

That is how we spend the Sundays in Aira while others are enjoying life at the lake Langano beach or at the pool in Hilton hotel.

No justice in this world either!

IN THE LAST MINUTE

Friday, August 21st, 2009

We are expecting the spare parts to arrive today from Addis Abeba. If God is willing we might be able to repair the sterilizer at least temporarily so that we can be back on the track with surgical activities as before.

This night we did a Cesarean on a woman who came in the last minute with obstructed labor. The uterus was on the verge of rupture with a tense Bandl’s ring (a sign of impending rupture). The nurse in charge thought she could hear faint fetal heart beats. We did not waste time to check with ultrasound since there was no electricity and it takes too long time to get the generator started.

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The relief was great when a live baby was delivered – the nurse ululated of joy!

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VIDEO ← click for video

 

 

 

As the procedure was done in a hurry the assistant – Adei Tsehaye (Mamma Sunshine) – got injured by the needle. The fear is always contamination with HIV.

Some time ago we had a visiting gynecologist from Sweden who was particular worried by that risk. We started then to screen all surgical patients in the operating room before surgery. The test takes only a couple of minutes and you have the result instantaneously. After screening more than 1000 with only one patient testing positive we have stopped the screening.

Now we only test in case of incidents like the above. The patient tested negative as expected - another sight of relief that night.

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Mother and child are doing fine this first day after surgery.

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VIDEO   ← click for video

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

BLOOD IS LIFE!

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

 

In the middle of a very busy program in the operating theater a woman was brought into the operation room in deep shock with ruptured uterus due to obstructed labor. The case was a bit atypical for us in that sense that she was bleeding actively.

Usually these cases come late with the abdomen full of old, infected blood mixed with amnion fluid and meconium, also containing the placenta and the dead fetus - often rotten - always infected. As a routine we repair the rupture and have a 97% survival rate (see page RUPTURED UTERUS).

Emergency laparotomy was done with repair of the rupture and hemostasis (stopping the bleeding). The procedure went fine, but the lady had lost a lot of blood and was in dire need of transfusion with a unit or two of fresh blood. She was transferred to our newly opened Recovery Room (see page RECOVERY ROOM) where the staff is observing the critical patients. After a while I went to see if the ordered blood was given. The operating technician, who is a 10’th grade student without any medical training, said a bit shy:”the vital signs are not good”. The patient was actually dead!

What happened was that the wife of the only relative with compatible blood group - who was willing to donate his blood - forbade him to do it! The patient never got the blood transfusion she needed to survive.  So much for the oppressed African women and universal sisterhood!

I have now decided to find money to buy a reliable refrigerator and open a small blood bank with some few units of 0 neg blood as soon as possible. In that way we can keep the patient alive with transfusion of banked blood until we can get fresh blood from the relatives.

In some cases with acute internal bleeding without infection, such as a ruptured ectopic pregnancy (a pregnancy outside the uterus which ruptures and bleeds internally) one can easily recover and give back the patient’s own blood from the abdomen to the vascular system as shown in the following photos from a case of ruptured ectopic pregnancy. 

The blood is scooped out from the abdominal cavity with a large sterile kitchen spoon and filtered through several layers of gauze into a glass bottle which contains a little citrate solution (that prevents the blood from coagulating). After collecting the blood in the bottle it is transfused back into a vein, a procedure called autotransfusion.

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GOOD NEWS X THREE!

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

The surgical cases are so many that we cannot keep up. We simply have too much to do. Therefore we are very grateful for the assistance we get from the surgeon-gynecologist from the Swedish Rotary Doctors. In one week she operated 6 women with uterus rupture (a life threatening complication to obstructed labor – see page UTERUS RUPTURE).

All six women survived and are being discharged successively. This confirms that the method we use as routine with repair instead of hysterectomy (removal of the uterus) is basically sound. In many other hospitals, including teaching institutions such as university hospitals, hysterectomy (removal of the uterus), which results in much higher maternal mortality, is the method of choice.

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6 ladies after surgery for ruptured uterus. One lady was a primipara (first pregnancy), one had one child alive from before, the rest had 2 or more children already. The first two mentioned ladies will get a chance to have a live baby, that is if they come in due time for a Cesarean at next pregnancy, the others all had BTL (bilateral tubal ligation – “sterilization”)

 

 

A seventh case of ruptured uterus came yesterday night. She is also doing well.

The other good news is that the large generator is working again. Our fellow missionary from Tchallia returned from his annual leave in Germany with the much needed spare part which our clever staff at Technical Department installed successfully.

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And there is more good news. Our “electrician” told us that it looks as it is not too difficult to repair the smaller generator as well. Electrician is put in citation marks” – “since he is self learned without any formal training. What he can accomplish with a minimum of instruments, often defect and partly broken ones, is amazing. I thought at a time that we would be forced to buy a new generator. The price of a 100 KW generator is 350 000 birr - money we simply don’t have, so we are lucky to have our clever “electrician” around.

Don’t miss the newly created PICURE GALLERY page!