External fixator placed on the left leg helps keep leg aligned while the soft tissue and shattered bone heal.
We were amazed at how well the bones were aligned despite not using C-ARM or x-ray in the operating room to assist. Evidence that God was in control of this case.
The right leg fracture was not as severe, but the soft tissue injury was more extensive. We were able to use a cast to hold this fracture in place.
Last Saturday evening, Heather and I had just settled down
in front of a perfect fire, prepared for a
quiet evening at home after a long week of intensive language studies and surgery, when my pager went off. I had
almost forgotten I was on-call, and while walking to the phone, I determined to
dispatch of this call quickly so that I might return to my respite. The general surgery resident efficiently
rattled off three cases that had already been handled by the on-call team. A distal radius fracture had been reduced, a
closed femur fracture had been admitted, and even an open tibia fracture, secondary
to a boda-boda (motorcycle taxi) accident, had already gone to theatre and been “washed
out.”
“I love having good residents on call,” I thought to myself,
assuming the resumption of my evening of comfort was imminent.
Then came the pièce de résistance, a universal phenomenon in which residents always “save
the best for last.” “One last patient I
want to run by you,” said Liz. “Go
ahead,” I said slowly, trying to hide my reluctance, instinctively knowing what
was coming. “It is an 18 year old boy with
gunshot wounds to both legs, with bilateral open tibia fractures.” Gunshot wounds (GSW as they are called by
trauma surgeons) can be very challenging injuries with significant soft tissue
loss and shattered bones. “The patient was
already ‘washed out’ at another hospital in Kisii, but we are wondering if he
needs to go back to surgery again tonight,” she said, as if almost curious to
see what I would say. For a moment, I
almost caved and pushed the case until the next day. But knowing the poor quality of treatment
at certain other hospitals, and not wanting to dump more work on the already over-worked Dr. Rowe, I said “we better take him back tonight.”
It was almost midnight as I left my warm
house into the chilly night, being technically “winter” here at Tenwek, a few clicks south the equator, with lows at night in the mid 40s. While
walking up to the hospital, I passed the night watchman who was bundled in a bonafide winter coat, replete with a fur-lined hood. (I have seen toddlers here dressed
in snow suits on 75 degree, perfectly sunny days, reinforcing the concept that “cold”
is definitely a relative term). “I must
be becoming more Kenyan,” I thought to myself as a chill ran down my spine,
forgetting what “cold” really is having spent five long winters in Minnesota
during residency. When I arrived in
theatre, Liz told me the rest of the story.
“Apparently, some thugs broke into the boy’s family home and were
slashing his father with a panga (machete).
While trying to protect his father, the boy was shot with a single
bullet that passed through both legs, shattering both tibiae,” she said. “Then the thugs ran.” She continued, “He was taken to a small
hospital in Kisii where both legs were “washed out” in theatre and splinted; he
was then transferred to Tenwek for definitive care.”
After the spinal anesthetic was given, we removed
the make-shift splints which were placed at the other hospital, and discovered
that both legs were still dirty, indicating that a
good I&D had not truly been performed, and wounds hastily stitched with thick, braided suture.
The first task was to thoroughly wash both legs, which was no easy task
for only two people (thus prompting a call for chief resident reinforcement). After a full “prep and drape,” we extended the
incisions on both legs, washed the wounds with several liters of normal saline,
debrided the dead muscle and tissue, placed a fixator on the left leg, lined up
the fractures as best as we could without C-ARM, miraculously closed all wounds with minimal
tension, and placed a plaster splint on the right leg, all of which took a
little over two hours. It was one of
those cases where we all felt Christ directing our hands, and sovereignly
blessing the work. As I walked
home, passed the bundled guard, and entered my still-warm home, I thanked God
for giving me the grace and strength to do the right thing for this young man, and set the right
example for the residents and staff, despite my strong, fleshly, continuous, selfish desire to remain comfortable.
This past week, I returned to language
study, and today, went to the ward to check on this patient, only to discover
that he had already been discharged from the hospital! Please pray for God’s complete healing in
this young man’s life: spiritually, mentally, emotionally and physically. Thanks for all your prayers and support without which, the work here would be impossible!
Col.
3:23-4 Whatever you do, work at it
with all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for men, since you
know that you will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward. It is the
Lord Christ you are serving.