12 October 2005 @ 08:23 pm
It's Love.  
Warning for the Easily Squicked: Today's update contains my impressions of witnessing cardiac surgery. If you aren't weird like me and so don't like the thought of heart surgery, please look away now.

Today marked the occasion of my third visit to the operating theatres.

I am officially in love.

Can I be a scrub nurse when I grow up? I want to do that. I want to do that a lot - I'm a little jealous of you right now, [livejournal.com profile] devida. Okay. I'm a lot jealous. ITU's interesting enough but really it's not where I want to be. I know it because I soent the first half of the day where I wanted to be and was fascinated by just about everything, which worries me a little. I spent most of the morning - from about half past eight to half past twelve (or maybe a little later) standing on a stool in front of a senior anesthetist staring into the opened thoracic cavity of a retired security guard with unstable angina, and I found the whole procedure absolutely fascinating.

I now know exactly what I want to do throughout the course of my professional life. By the time I left the hospital this evening I was already formulating a grand plan which, with any luck, should see me getting a job in this area within a year or so of qualification (most theaters wanting staff with ward experience before they go to work in that area). With any luck and several courses under my belt, I should then be in a position to try and move upwards. For the first time in my life, I have real ambitions. Once again, this is mildly scary. I never used to be an ambitious person.

I guess you have to know what you want before you can start getting ambitious, though.

Anyways. The procedure I witnessed revels in the tile of a CABG. Yes, it really is pronounced 'cabbage'. It's short for Coronary Artery Bypass Graft, just in case anyone out there was wondering what in hell cabbages have to do with anything. Outside of medicalese I guess that's the infamous heart bypass (though technically it's not bypassing the heart at all, it's... I don't think anyone cares, laila, just get on with the update so you can go get some food and rest up for work tomorrow. Speaking of which, I think I'm going to have to answer my comments later, I've got a regrettable need for sleep). And it's fascinating. What they do is they take healthier vessels from other parts of the body (such as the radial artery, which I saw dissected today) and graft it over diseased portions of the coronary arteries, increasing blood supply to the heart.

It's a pretty big deal. The sternum gets sawn apart and the ribs pulled open, which isn't nearly as gross as I thought it would be - it's actually pretty simple and tidy with the right tools - and the patient is kept deliberately hypothermic and ends up on a heart-lung machine for part of the procedure. And it's fascinating. I love being in operating theaters.

Weirdly enough, I've always been rather more grossed out by pictures of people with their ribs pulled apart with clamps and their chests opened up than I was actually looking down, from my vantage point on said convenient stool, into an actual human being's actual open chest. The grossest bit about it all was probably the diathermy, or rather the smell of the diathermy, but even that wasn't what I'd call noxious. I probably shouldn't have been surprised by how large the aorta is when it carries six liters of blood from the heart every minute but my God man, it looks huge when taken in context with the heart and surrounding structures. I cannot get over how amazing human anatomy is (we're like layer cake, or an orange with lots of distinct little segments, but infinitely more exciting than either). Drawings and photos just don't do it justice.

That said, it it is a little freaky to look at a total stranger's beating heart.

Go figure how I can't watch gory movies without feeling ill and having to turn away, but I can watch cardiac surgery performed in front of my very eyes not only with perfect equanimity but in a state of rapt fascination. Blood in movies squicks me whereas in reality it's just red stuff that transports goodies from point a to point b, and waste vice versa; for a lot of people it's quite otherwise, they think cinematic blood is cool, but real blood is squicky. I think I'd rather have it my way round.

And I'm going to go to theaters again just as soon as it gets arranged. The ITU staff nurse i/c students knows all about my new love and has promised to help me. Maybe I couldn't get a theater placement, but I will at least get to witness more surgery. And oh I can't wait. Because I want to spend the rest of my life in operating theaters. I don't care how long it takes me to get there - get there I will.

Told you I'd gone and caught ambition.
 
 
Current Music: kodou - dir en grey
Current Mood: enraptured
 
 
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[identity profile] quentin-w.livejournal.com on October 12th, 2005 10:41 pm (UTC)
Ambition is good...only a few people have gotten in trouble with it...but they aimed a little too high...world domination...

Anyways...sounds cool!! hopefully people don't mind the hack saw and the ribs...then again...that's gotta sound really really creepy...hack saw to bone...

Yay! I'm glad you're feeling better than from your post a coupld days past! ^^
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[identity profile] angstchan.livejournal.com on October 12th, 2005 11:58 pm (UTC)
Were you on and I didn't know it? XO.

=\ I feel like I don't know you anymore. *sniff*
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[identity profile] sevendials.livejournal.com on October 13th, 2005 09:03 pm (UTC)
I was online for about fifteen minutes last night simply for the sake of posting; I use it as a way to wind down after a stressful day (and no matter how much I love nursing it's often hellishly stressful on placements, especially when I've only just begun them). I haven't been able to be online in the evenings for much longer than a half hour all week as a result of my schedule, and haven't been signing on for fear of getting carried away and losing much-needed sleep. I worked Monday, had Tuesday off, then worked Wednesday and today. Having one day off in isolation means I cannot sit up for any time at all during the evening of said say if I want to get a decent night's sleep, and Monday being my first day on placement I was exhausted when I got home. And stressed. Very stressed.

I'm sorry you feel as if you don't know me any more; the intention was never to make you feel that. I haven't been able to come properly online in ages due to the combined forces of scheduling, computer downtime, and sickness making it near impossible for me to sit in this cold dining room for any longer than I have to. I'd come online now but it's nearly ten pm, I got up this morning at half five and I really, really need sleep. I want to talk to you, though, and if it wasn't for the fact that my head is about to explode with tiredness I'd be signing on now. Would tomorrow be good? I'll be on then, unless the PC explodes...
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[identity profile] angstchan.livejournal.com on October 14th, 2005 01:11 am (UTC)
That's not what I meant.

I mean I really don't know you anymore. Reading these entries makes me feel like you're someone I'm just meeting for the first time. You don't even email me anymore. You used to send me these huge long things almost daily, and now I'm lucky if you mention my name once in passing.

And then I don't email you for fear of you not reading it, not replying to it, or just getting bored since I do the same thing every day and nothing has changed with me.

I would never expect you to come on when you're busy, that would be ridiculous, and I'm not the type of person who demands attention (with the exception of that certain person you know). However, it really kind of weirds me out when I read these things and I don't recognize you.

Tomorrow...I should be here. I may go shopping with my mom after work, since Saturday we're having company, but it looks like she may not wait for me to get home from work to go. I'll pop on MSN when I get home.
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[identity profile] goddess-triad.livejournal.com on October 13th, 2005 02:16 am (UTC)

<3 Hi, Laila-chan!

Just making myself known that I am still alive. I'm checking your entries right now and will make respective comments.

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[identity profile] goddess-triad.livejournal.com on October 13th, 2005 02:51 am (UTC)

You're one of the lucky ones, my dear. At a very young age, you already know what you want. Though you just discovered it lately, at least you actually found out about it, right? Some people older than you still don't know what to do with their life. So,you're really lucky to have found it now. Nothing's wrong with being ambitious. In fact, sometimes you need it to make your life a bit more worth it or at least interesting. Adds up to your purpose... whatever you think your purpose here is. And it seems to me, you've found it.

Maybe you're just not irked because it comes with your profession? Maybe they embedded it into you unconsciously that you should be used to these things. But whatever the reason or case is, you're a brave woman. Seriously, you are. I don't know how you do it. Damn, you're tough.

Good luck to your new found calling. I'm glad you're happy. ^_^ I know you can do it, dear.

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[identity profile] bad-fics87.livejournal.com on October 14th, 2005 03:49 pm (UTC)
I wish I had some ambition right about now...I really hate all my courses except psych...but that's a given. I wish you luck! ^__^
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[identity profile] devida.livejournal.com on October 15th, 2005 09:01 am (UTC)
hard work
girl, it's cool in theatres. Like 'pretty, bloody freezing' cool. The constant air flow [there to reduce risk of airborne infection] means that the temperature's always under 20 degrees, and the positive pressure you use in theatres means that all the doors are very heavy and I have to use my whole body weight just to get into theatre in the first place.

When you're in there you just have to work like the clappers. It's kinda like working in Tesco's at night when you're called to the loading dock at 3am. everyone has to know where everything is and you can't daydream or have a lapse in concentration otherwise you either look really stupid or the surgeons yells at you and tells you to 'pull your finger out' [direct medical term].

But, apart from that everyone's pretty laid back. the patient doesn't say much and if the surgeon has an iPod then you get to listen to music. the guy yesterday was cutting away to Oasis, Miles Davis and Paul Weller.
Odd mix i can tell you.
xx
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