Orthopaedic☠ people are like :
SLAB Se karenge Sabka Swagat 😋😋
Fracture zinda hai !!!😓😂-
Out of 200 plus bones
In ur body, there has to
be one bone called
funny bone🤣 just to
entertain you🤣-
a POP Cast.
It was hard at first but then we acclimatized to it and now when it's gone we feel something missing.
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Orthopedic Dr can fix a broken leg any sort of fracture, I remember my heart is also broken bt not even single person in this world can fix a broken heart, because it's damaged .
internal damage ECG se bhi pta nhi chalta saala 😂..-
So it was June 19,2021. I was posted in Orthopaedics Department for my internship. It was OT day. So I reached early. In the OT complex I met our DNB. She guided me about some pending work and helped me change into scrubs. Patient Number One was shifted to OT table from pre-op room. He was a case of fracture both bone right leg posted for Tibial Nailing. Initially there were two senior teachers and our DNB. But as the operation progressed more senior teachers came. At a point of time it felt like the whole Ortho Department was in OT and I was standing in a corner figuring out whom to listen, where to look and whom to answer. The case took one and a half hour. Wearing that heavy lead apron was tiring for my shoulders. One might actually faint seeing the instruments in action for the first time or I may call them tools as they appear. Then we progressed to Case two posted for Tibial Nailing as well. Next Case three also for Tibial Nailing. For the first day in Ortho OT and that too straight for seven hours plus the extra weight of lead apron, still I enjoyed the day.
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So it was June 21,2021. I was posted in Orthopaedics Department for my internship. My duty was in ward. Me and my co-intern were doing our work as for a regular pre-op day. When suddenly a patient's attendant came to report that the patient is having shortness of breath. We immediately went to the patient along with our DNB. The patient was lying on bed with his head raised up along the wall. We took his vitals and everything was almost fine. The patient was a case of fracture shaft of femur and on investigations done for PAC he was diagnosed with Pulmonary Tuberculosis. His ATT was started on that day itself. We were continuously monitoring him when he started retching and complaining of headache. Then his saturation started falling and blood pressure started fluctuating. Our DNB gave him medications while we called Medicine and Respiratory Medicine Department. It took him around an hour and a half to start recovering. Then we completed our rest work and took leave. Next morning when I reached ward I went straight to him. He was fine.
Seriously you never know when and where an emergency can arise.-
Who says studying various fractures, splints and tractions is tough when you have got such an amazing teacher who while sitting in a class can take you to OPD with amazing patients being our MCQ questions.
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Why would I be the one who spill bad words!
I think people should know their boundaries. It is very important to work in certainty within the territory. As a professional I have never interrupt in anyone’s work even if we are in the similar ones!
If all of us have the potential to fight in all areas, we might not need each other. But the truth is twisted. God has created this futile body. As doctors, it is our duty to protect it not to harm it for own purpose.-
So it was June 30, 2021. I was posted in Orthopaedics department for my internship. Me and my co-intern were in the OPD with a senior doctor consulting patients. Our DNB asked us to accompany her to minor OT. There she asked my co-intern to put on gloves for a case of foreign body right forearm. While they removed the foreign body, I stood there glaring with my doe eyes. When she looked at me, she smiled and asked me to join in for next case which was excision of subcutaneous cyst left elbow. So with excitement I put on gloves. But the next minute she got a phone call and had to leave immediately. I tried waiting for her but five minutes seemed like an hour to me. So I went to our senior doctor asking him to teach me the procedure. OPD timings were almost over so he came and started giving me instructions. I gave local anaesthesia, then an incision and under his guidance I performed the procedure. Our DNB joined us and helped me to complete it. The last time I watched the procedure, it appeared easy to me. But the day when I did it myself, I realised it wasn't that easy. Still I learnt a new thing that day.
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