Fauquier ENT Blog

Various News About Things Going on at Fauquier ENT & World

Archive for December, 2011

New Treatment for Sore Throat

Posted by fauquierent on December 31, 2011

Well according to American singer-songwriter Suzi Quatro, “I used to get a lot of sore throats and then one of my sisters told me that all illnesses start in the colon. I started taking a daily colon cleanser powder mixed with fresh juice every morning and it made an enormous difference,” Quatro told the Daily Mail newspaper.

It is unclear how many ounces of juice, what type of juice, and grams of colon cleansing powder was required to obtain this beneficial effect.

For her outstanding contribution to pseudo-science, she was awarded the prestigious 2011 SAS.

(If you haven’t figured it out already, daily colon cleanser powder does NOT help with sore throats. However, there are rare situations where colon diseases like Crohn’s Disease can cause throat problems including soreness and swallowing problems.)

Source:
Whale sperm, orgasmic feet top 2011 bad science list. Reuters 12/28/11

http://rcm.amazon.com/e/cm?lt1=_blank&bc1=FFFFFF&IS2=1&bg1=FFFFFF&fc1=000000&lc1=0000FF&t=fauentcon-20&o=1&p=8&l=as4&m=amazon&f=ifr&ref=ss_til&asins=B000FVM8C2
http://rcm.amazon.com/e/cm?lt1=_blank&bc1=FFFFFF&IS2=1&bg1=FFFFFF&fc1=000000&lc1=0000FF&t=fauentcon-20&o=1&p=8&l=as4&m=amazon&f=ifr&ref=ss_til&asins=B00009ENKU

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Stabbing Headache Around Eye or Cheek

Posted by fauquierent on December 31, 2011

Do you suffer from a stabbing headache in the areas denoted in red? Do these headaches seemingly come out of nowhere one day? Perhaps started after a viral upper respiratory infection?

You may be suffering from a condition known as contact point headache. This type of headache is also known as:

• Sluder’s neuralgia
• Anterior ethmoid neuralgia
• Sphenopalatine ganglion neuralgia
• Pterygopalatine ganglion neuralgia

This type of headache has often been confused with cluster headache, migraine without aura, sinusitis, or other undefinable pathology especially since CT scans and MRI scans that are obtained often do not reveal any tumor or presence of infection.

Click here for more information.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

What Makes a Successful Hospital – Where Are the Tweakers???

Posted by fauquierent on December 26, 2011

First off, I don’t have a business degree (in fact, I’m a MBA drop-out) nor a degree in hospital administration (does chairing a hospital committee count?), but I do have an opinion (don’t we all) in light of having co-founded a bioinformatics company (iCORD, LLC) in the past based on a patent developed during my surgical residency… But I also admit that the company was ultimately unsuccessful if one measures success in terms of monetary profits, but I can say I succeeded in that my now defunct company’s “product” still lives on at Duke University Medical Center.

It is perhaps my mixed bag background of a few victories and even more failures that I learned a thing or two about what it means to become better… it is what I call evolutionary tweaking or to put it more bluntly… whining and doing something about it. But let’s stick with the “tweaker” euphemism.

Tweakers are annoying and may be a thorn in any administrator’s side, but they produce results. They tinker and tinker in an attempt to improve and better a situation they consider a problem whether it be an engine, a computer program, or an entire production system.
Based on Isaacson’s biography about Steve Jobs, he had it in abundance… even on medical care and devices during his last days.
Apparently, in his very last days of life, he went through 67 nurses before he found 3 he liked. He also refused to wear an oxygen mask due to a perceived poor design until he personally reviewed 5 different mask options and picked the one he liked best.
I’m certainly not promoting a culture where every patient, nurse, doctor, and administrator should start whining and complaining about everything. The hospital would shut-down.
BUT, there should be a culture where incremental tweaks are not only allowed, but encouraged with the expectation that many ideas will fail with monetary setbacks. However, just like survival of the fittest, the cumulative evolutionary cycles of keeping successful ideas and tossing ones that aren’t will lead to a better organization over time… continuously and cheaply.
Home run ideas should not be the goal. Batting consistent singles (or tweaks) are…
There are systems to describe this process: PDSA (Plan Do Study Act), Toyota Production System, Just-In-Time Production, Deming Wheel, Shewhart Cycle, Control Circle, etc.
Now I certainly am not the first to suggest this concept to hospital settings. In fact, I’ve seen PDSA posters tacked on a wall in hospital physician lounges in the past.
However, I have observed great variances in how different hospital systems incorporate this “controlled whining” into their culture and administration.
Some embrace this process wholeheartedly and have succeeded in abundance. Others give lip service and designate the “tweakers” as whiners to be shut-up with bureaucratic red-tape, offensiveness requiring peer-review, or worse.
Employees and staff are a hospital’s greatest assets both in terms of knowledge and production services. A hospital can either embrace trying to unlock the knowledge of what it already possesses or it can stifle them by punishing those who try to “tweak” thereby sending the message to everybody else to stay in the background… passivity being the rule… or voluntarily leave (or get fired).
The long-term success of a hospital system depends on how well it utilizes ALL its resources including not only encouraging an idea a hospitalist physician may have about telephone communication (allowing for faster patient care), but also trying to discover the knowledge trapped in a janitor’s head who just might know how to thoroughly clean a hospital floor in half the time (saving time and money), but is too afraid to say anything.
Adapt or perish. History is replete with immensely successful companies that failed to adapt and are now either bankrupt or nearing death… Eastman Kodak, Tower Records, Borders Bookstores, etc.
And how does a hospital adapt to avoid non-existence? Continuously tweak… even when things are going well. USE all your assets with all guns blazing rather than smothering them.
Celebrate the tweakers!!!

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Toddlers Unable to Tell If They Mispronounce a Word (Thereby Can’t Auto-Correct)

Posted by fauquierent on December 24, 2011

Older children and adults constantly monitor what they say and automatically correct or self-adjust when they hear a peach error… oops, sorry I meant to say “speech” error.

Such auditory feedback error correction however is not something we are born with. Rather it seems to be a skill that develops sometime between ages 2 and 4 years according to a new study.

Researchers had adults, four-year-olds, and two-year-olds say “bed” repeatedly. But scientists filtered the sound so that the subjects heard themselves through headphones pronouncing it as “bad.” Adults spontaneously compensated, and changed so that the word sounded correct to their own ears. They wound up saying “bid.”

Four-year olds also adjusted their speech.

But the two-year olds kept saying “bed” even though they kept hearing “bad.””

So, how do young children learn to speak correctly if they can’t even hear themselves say something incorrectly?

The answer to this question has great import, especially to speech therapists whose job is to “fix” this problem. ENTs are often consulted as well to ensure a child does not have a tongue tie or hearing loss that can also lead to speech difficulties in a young child.

It’s possible that young children depend on their parents to correct them when they say something incorrectly.

However, nobody quite knows for sure.

A follow-up study (not sure if will pass muster with an IRB) would be to have 2 sets of 2 year olds… one group where the parent constantly corrects any speech errors the child makes immediately. The other set would have parents NEVER correct a child’s speech errors and let the child learn on their own.

Two possible outcomes… By the age of 5 years, there may be no difference in speech skills between the two groups OR there is a big difference and all the parental anxiety over their 3 years old child’s inability to say “pizza” may be unnecessary (along with speech therapy sessions)… after all, they will “grow” or “learn” out of it with time.

Reference:
Toddlers Don’t Monitor Their Own Speech. Scientific American 12/24/11

Children’s Development of Self-Regulation in Speech Production. Current Biology, 10.1016/j.cub.2011.11.052

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

Santa Claus Cigarette Ad Blast From the Past

Posted by fauquierent on December 24, 2011

Given the holidays, take a look at this cigarette ad from the past… Times truly have changed (for the better)!

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Singer George Michael With Tracheostomy

Posted by fauquierent on December 23, 2011

Reuters reported today that singer George Michael suffered from severe pneumonia and underwent a tracheostomy during his hospitalization. A tracheostomy is when a hole is made in the throat for a patient to breath through.

Here is a video of what his trach surgery may have looked like.

Michael apparently was in the middle of a tour when he became ill requiring him to cancel upcoming shows.

A tracheostomy is often performed whenever a patient has been intubated (tube down the throat) on a breathing machine for a prolonged period of time.

For more information on trachs, click here. Watch a video of a trach being performed here.

http://www.reuters.com/resources_v2/flash/video_embed.swf?videoId=227351807&edition=BETAUS

Reference:
Gaunt George Michael says “fortunate to be here” Reuters 12/23/11

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Robotic Surgery for Obstructive Sleep Apnea

Posted by fauquierent on December 23, 2011

I came across this article the other day regarding use of the daVinci robot to perform base of tongue surgery for obstructive sleep apnea.

For those who don’t know, the daVinci robot system made by Intuitive Surgical is a robotic system whereby the surgeon directs the arms of the robot to perform surgery in difficult-to-access areas of the body.

My feeling is that using a robot to perform sleep apnea surgery is way overkill akin to using a $50,000 sniper rifle to kill an ant on the wall.

Everything the daVinci robot can do can also be done without the robot with equivalent patient outcomes. In fact, without the robot, the surgery can be performed more quickly, efficiently, and with less anesthesia than with the robot.

The article also describes sedated (sleep) endoscopy to determine WHERE the obstruction occurs during sleep. The areas of obstruction can than be precisely addressed surgically. Again, this does not require a robot. In fact, I would hazard to say that even the surgeons quoted in the article does not use the robot to perform this procedure.

There are occasions where the robot may be helpful with ENT surgical procedures, but this is not one of them.

Reference:
N.J. surgeons on the cutting edge in fight against sleep apnea.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Amoeba Deaths from Neti-Pot Use and How to Minimize Risk

Posted by fauquierent on December 22, 2011

In the past few weeks, there have been numerous stories about the 2nd death in Louisiana from Neti-Pot use leading to an amoeba infection of the brain. The culprit organism Naegleria fowleri causes a life-threatening encephalitis after passing thru the nose and up into the brain where the organism eats neurons for food.

As such, recommendations have been issued to use water as instructed with the Neti-Pot packaging… water should be boiled, distilled, or filtered.

However, before the millions of people who may have elected to simply use tap-water change their daily routine, consider that more commonly, swimming in warm lakes or rivers causes 2-3 amoeba related deaths per year… and swimming in and of itself leads to thousands of drownings per year. So far, there have been only TWO amoeba-related deaths linked with Neti-Pot usage that we know of so far.

In any case, lets talk about boiled, distilled, or filtered water and what a Neti-Pot user can do keep their daily routine simple. After all, it is so simple to simply fill the container with running tap-water. The additional step to keep things safe can become annoying.

Boiled Water: Naegleria fowleri can not survive in temperatures above 47°C. As such, by boiling water, you guarantee death if any are present in the water.

Save time by boiling a large amount of water and storing in 1 gallon containers for daily use.

Distilled Water: By definition, distillation involves boiling the water and then condensing the steam into a clean container. It’s a slow process, but it not only kills any micro-organisms much like simple boiling does, but also removes any inorganic “impurities” that may be harmful like mercury as well as beneficial minerals including calcium, magnesium, and sodium. Distillation does not discriminate.

It is not feasible for most individuals to set up a home water distillation process just so they can use the Neti-Pot. Though can get expensive over the years, save time by purchasing large volumes of distilled water to have at home. But, there are portable water distilling machines you can purchase as well.

Filtered Water: Water that is filtered is cleaned by means of a fine physical barrier, a chemical process or a biological process. In most homes, filtered water is almost universally achieved by a physical barrier. There are numerous vendors out there that sell devices to filter the water including Pur Water and Brita.

Save time by purchasing a faucet attachment that automatically filters water into your Neti-Pot when you need it.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Doctor Distraction Happens… It’s Mandatory!

Posted by fauquierent on December 21, 2011

I admittedly snorted out loud when I read a New York Times article  earlier last week regarding increased physician distraction due to electronic devices, especially with the advent of the smartphone with its emails, text messages, calls, and other alerts that ping intermittently throughout a typical work day.

There is no question that electronic devices distract physicians as the article pointed out… But that’s like complaining about a leaky faucet when there’s a flooded basement and a hole in the roof.

The bigger problem that should be mentioned is hospital bureaucracy which probably creates just as much if not more unintended distractions for physicians and nurses.

What many patients and lay public may not realize is that there is a TON of paperwork that goes into the care of a patient. Regulatory bodies like the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) that accredits hospitals have made it mandatory in many cases though I suspect hospital administration often carries it a step above and beyond what is truly necessary.

What all this “mandatory” paperwork means is that nurses are calling physicians all the time just so they can check a box on a form… and there are a LOT of boxes to check.

Take a simple ear tube placement. A procedure that takes about 1-2 minutes to perform under sedation in the pediatric population.

It takes about 15-20 minutes to fill out all the nursing and physician forms (whether paper or electronic medical records). When the surgery actually begins, the nurse is too busy filling out even more forms rather than paying attention to the surgery… and often the surgery is already over… and the nurse is still busy filling out forms.

Talk about distraction… a registered nurse has been relegated to being a mere secretary rather than helping (or paying attention) in the care of a patient.

I recently asked a nurse how much time they spent on actual patient care versus how much time filling out forms during a typical shift.

It saddened my heart when I was told 60-70% of a nurse’s time is spent on filling out forms (whether notes, chart documentation, medication reconciliation, etc) and only 30-40% on actual patient care. This time disparity was not always true in years past.

OR… ask any physician how many times they get called during a typical day because some form or paperwork was not completed or needs completion or just remind to get it completed by nurses who themselves are the main individuals who suffer under the crush of mandatory documentation in a hospital setting.

It is irritating to say the least to get a phone call during the middle of an operation, say dissecting a tumor off the facial nerve during a parotid cancer resection, by someone who wanted to remind me to sign off on a medication list on a patient I’ve already provided prescriptions for.

Another classic experience of mine was when the anesthesiologist had trouble intubating a patient who started to suffer a severe lack of oxygen. I was immediately called to the bedside and performed an emergency tracheostomy.

Of course, the nurse (well indoctrinated in form completion) involved in the case immediately instructed me to STOP performing the trach and to get consent as per the regulations… which is true 99% of the time… but never mind that. Heaven forbid we now can’t check that little box that states “consent obtained prior to surgery.” But in the interest of patient care, I did suggest that it would be better if the patient lived with an unconsented trach rather than died due to time spent obtaining consent.

Though electronic devices may be considered a “distraction” analogous to a mosquito buzz that comes and goes, one must not forget the avalanche of paperwork which is a much more pervasive and insidious distraction that DELIBERATELY takes attention away from the care of the patient. I understand the need for documentation, but at some point when the documentation itself dominates the majority of heathcare rather than the actual administration of care, there’s something fundamentally wrong going on.

It’s probably why medical missions are so gratifying to participating nurses and physicians where 90%+ of the time is in actual patient care.

Reference:
As Doctors Use More Devices, Potential for Distraction Grows. NYT Dec 14, 2011.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Carpenter Shoots Himself in the Neck with Nail Gun

Posted by fauquierent on December 18, 2011

According to Boston News, in early December 2011, a carpenter accidentally discharged a nail gun and embedded a 3.5 inch nail in the bottom of his neck. Based on the CT scan included here, it appears the nail entered the neck dead center given the clear appearance of the windpipe.

Based on the location, the anatomic sequence of nail piercing is as follows:

Skin –> Thyroid Gland –> Trachea –> Esophagus Back Wall –> Cervical Vertebral Body

The damage to skin, thyroid, and trachea is not a big deal… In fact, one can consider this a mini-tracheostomy. Minimal bleeding would be expected.

However, the hole between the trachea and esophagus is another matter which may heal well… or not. The esophagus is the swallow tube which transports food from the mouth to the stomach. A hole in the esophagus to the trachea (tracheo-esophageal fistula) would allow swallowed food/liquid to pass from the esophagus over to the trachea and into the lungs leading to pneumonia and bronchitis. This uncontrollable aspiration can potentially be life threatening as the hole could also allow food to pass BETWEEN the trachea and esophagus right down to the heart leading to possible mediastinitis (inflammation/infection of the heart lining).

Treatment initially would be placement of a feeding tube and a long course of IV antibiotics. If the hole does not spontaneously close, it would require surgical closure, typically with a flap of some kind.

The easiest test to perform to determine whether the hole has closed up or not is a swallow study using gastrografin or barium. Watch a video of how this test is performed.

As the news story mentioned, he was VERY lucky the nail went in where it did. If it went in a little further to the right or left, it could have punctured his carotid or jugular vein and he would have bled to death.

Reference:
Carpenter Shoots Himself In Neck With Nail Gun. WCVB Boston News

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.