CataractCoach 1657: six mistakes that young eye surgeons make

  Рет қаралды 22,367

Uday Devgan

Uday Devgan

Күн бұрын

Mistake 1: Not knowing your patient inside and out
Remember that it is not “just a surgery” but rather it is an invasive procedure that will change the way your patients see the world, every waking moment, for the rest of their lives. Being prepared ahead of time allows you to have a smoother and safer surgery. If the patient has a white cataract, you will know ahead of time to have the trypan blue dye ready. If the patient has pulmonary disease with orthopnea, you will need to adjust the bed position as well as your phaco machine settings. If the patient is a poorly controlled diabetic, then postoperative healing can be compromised and the complication rate can be higher. You must know the complete ophthalmic history of your patients as well as their systemic conditions that can affect the surgery and the outcome.
Mistake 2: Not setting up the equipment ahead of time
The microscope needs to be set for your pupillary distance and refraction. The stool and foot pedals should be positioned ergonomically with enough clearance from the patient’s bed. The phaco machine must be programmed with your individual settings for your specific technique. You can even designate different settings for dense cataracts vs. softer ones. Your patient list and orders for the day need to be neat and orderly in order to ensure that you will be placing the correct lens in each patient.
Mistake 3: Poor draping and positioning of the patient
The patient should be positioned so that the iris is parallel to the floor. This will allow better visualization and easier access while keeping the patient comfortable. The head can be positioned so that it is closer to the surgeon to avoid having to reach. Some surgeons elect to temporarily tape the patient’s head to the operating room table for added security. The draping of the lashes away from the surgical field is critical because it is the typical source of bacterial flora that can cause endophthalmitis. In addition, by using a plastic drape around the lid margin, the oil-producing glands can be blocked from contaminating the ocular surface.
Mistake 4: Making a poorly constructed incision
The incision is more than an entry site for the cataract surgery - it is a large factor in the fluidic balance of the eye, the astigmatic effect of surgery and the barrier to postoperative infection. Care must be taken to make the incision with the proper dimensions to match the phaco tip sleeve. For my resident surgeons, I recommend making the tunnel length of the incision about 2 mm while barely nicking the limbal vessels for the best long-term sealing. Incisions that are purely in the clear cornea should be avoided because they are completely avascular, which means that they will not permanently seal in the future. A poorly constructed incision will also lead to instability of the anterior chamber during phacoemulsification. This will increase the risk of surge and rupture of the posterior capsule, resulting in a complication that can significantly reduce the visual potential of the eye.
Mistake 5: Not keeping the eye in primary position and not pivoting
Once you have instruments in the eye, the position of your hands and fingers will determine if the eye is in primary position looking straight into the microscope or if it is being pushed into the nasal canthus. The surgeon controls the eye position by hand movements and the ability to pivot within the incision. Think of our eye instruments primarily as pivoting tools. In a rowboat, the handle of the oar will move only about 2 feet, but the paddle end, which is in the water, will move 8 to 10 feet or more due to the pivoting action. Our instruments are like this in reverse: We move the long handles of our instruments 30 mm outside of the eye, and then using the incision as our pivot, the tip of the instruments moves 1 mm or less inside of the eye.
Mistake 6: Failure to learn from every surgery
Athletes review footage of their performance so they can learn from their mistakes and figure out ways of improving. Surgeons should do the same, and with modern digital video equipment, it is possible to record all surgeries that are done. These videos should be studied later with a focus on what could be done better. You should always aim to improve your surgical skill, even after having done thousands of surgeries. Also remember that it is more so about judgment, skill and finesse rather than a specific technique because that aspect will change in the future. The way we do surgery today will certainly evolve in the years to come, and we need to keep up with the latest advances. Finally, make sure you see your own post-operative patients so that you can see the direct effect of the surgery and their healing response.

Пікірлер: 29
@tracycarter2384
@tracycarter2384 Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for all you do. You have improved my practice of ophthalmic surgery considerably with your advice and videos. I watch and read everything you publish.
@bzcti
@bzcti Жыл бұрын
Great pearls for all surgeons, not just our younger colleagues!
@saimasd8212
@saimasd8212 Жыл бұрын
My first video in the morning !! And great lessons learnt. Thanks for being Der for young surgeons like us😇
@DrMuzzammilHussain
@DrMuzzammilHussain Жыл бұрын
Thanks Uday, brilliant summary. I've come to realise these 6 things, but great that I can reference this for future!
@UdyOnTheGlo
@UdyOnTheGlo Жыл бұрын
This is so valuable. Thank you so much for sharing with such detail!
@nooralrawi4849
@nooralrawi4849 3 ай бұрын
Thank you so much sir ..may allah bless you and your knowledge
@hectorrivera4347
@hectorrivera4347 Жыл бұрын
Thank you DR
@TheSushrut
@TheSushrut Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much, sir!!🙏🏻
@dego2899
@dego2899 Жыл бұрын
So great video! We learn from every case we do 👍🏻
@shubhrat
@shubhrat Жыл бұрын
Thank you sir
@Dr.Thandi
@Dr.Thandi Жыл бұрын
This is so helpful! I never gave too much thought to the incision unless it was too far back and my conj started blowing up but you are right it is one of the most important steps.
@barbcarroll5265
@barbcarroll5265 Жыл бұрын
wow...i wish you were doing my high mopia cataract surgery. thanks.
@pennykennedy8163
@pennykennedy8163 11 ай бұрын
I was legally blind before cataract surgery at age 52 due to being a micro preemie. My vision was 20/800 & 20/1000! Dr. Downer performed my surgery; it was nothing short of a miracle to now see 20/20 & 20/30! Such a blessing! I hope you had similar experience! God bless!
@giovannibonfardeci9324
@giovannibonfardeci9324 10 ай бұрын
fantastic
@stephensudhakar6563
@stephensudhakar6563 Жыл бұрын
Ultimate sir
@najahmohammad1774
@najahmohammad1774 Жыл бұрын
You are so clever person.
@cosmicpalm4404
@cosmicpalm4404 Жыл бұрын
Sir is ultra Legend.
@rxsonny
@rxsonny Жыл бұрын
I need to get my pterygium remove Dr. How can I make appointment and get this done. I'm from Texas?
@namnguyen-ni1rj
@namnguyen-ni1rj Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much but i want to learn more, how i can contact with you?
@IgnacioManzitti
@IgnacioManzitti Жыл бұрын
Great video Uday!! thanks, do you authorize me to make a the version in spanish of it to post it in Istagram? of course, naming you. Thanks
@UdayDevgan
@UdayDevgan Жыл бұрын
sure! send me a link. I speak Spanish too :)
@merydr
@merydr Жыл бұрын
👍
@islandmonusvi
@islandmonusvi Жыл бұрын
“A beginner is less than a thousand surgeries done…”
@ildikomolnar8437
@ildikomolnar8437 Жыл бұрын
,🙌😍😍👍👍👍👏👏💓
@jamminjoy
@jamminjoy Жыл бұрын
I had cataract surgery 10 days ago at a well-regarded East Coast teaching hospital (The Wilmer Eye Institute). The surgeon, who is also a professor, implanted the wrong lens (mid-distance) against my wishes as clearly stated by me in the operating room prior to surgery as well as stated on the surgical authorization I signed for a distance IOL days prior to surgery. The doctor developed my IOL prescription without ever communicating it to me directly, nor obtaining my feedback nor obtaining my approval. I had also made my vision goals known in a message to her on the hospital's internal patient messaging system several weeks prior to surgery. Further, due to pain during the surgery, I was unable to keep my head still which resulted in having to halt the operation multiple times so that the anesthetist could try to make me more comfortable. This concern had been raised by me with the doctor several times prior to surgery, but she still chose an inadequate pain control method. Although I was told that she would visit me both before and after the surgery, she did neither. Her new Fellow, who did not know me, came to the pre-op area briefly, flipped through my documents while barely speaking to me and departed. Now I am left with an implanted right-side mid-distance monofocal lens that will limit my ability to have a distance lens implanted in my remaining eye. As an avid birder this will most definitely NOT optimize my vision for my most cherished pastime. As a 75-year-old woman, I was patronizingly told that the mid-distance lens would enable me to watch TV at home without glasses - not remotely my vision goal! I have no idea where to go nor whom to talk to about this avoidable mistake. Having watched Dr. Devgan's videos to inform myself on what to expect during surgery, something never covered by my doctor herself, I now wonder how many other Wilmer patients may have had similar experiences. The thought that this surgeon, with her willful disregard for my wishes, is responsible for teaching young doctors is deeply disturbing to me.
@RebekahsZ
@RebekahsZ Жыл бұрын
If you want an intimate experience in modern surgery, you should go to a surgeon who owns his or her own practice and has a few co-owning surgeons who keep tabs on each other’s conduct. In big practices, there is less intimacy, less mentorship and less accountability. Surgeons are often treated as “providers” and quality suffers. Find a sweet little home-town surgical group, where the surgeon attends the same church as his/her patients, and you’ll get much better care.
@jamminjoy
@jamminjoy Жыл бұрын
@@RebekahsZ Thanks, Keith. I would, if I could. I have dry eye and this surgeon is a dry eye specialist. She did a good job of getting my eye into proper shape for surgery, getting good measurements (I think), and monitoring pressure, but completely blew it on patient communication despite my telling her in every possible way my vision goals were for the best possible distance sight for outdoor life. In fact, in the OR while she was browbeating me to accept the mid-distance lens so that I could watch TV at home without glasses, I told her "This mid-distance lens is not what I want! I want to be able to see a deer jump in the field a half-mile away. " I assumed that with a forceful statement like that in front of a dozen OR witnesses she would get the lens I wanted. Two days ago, when I called J & J with my product info to verify the implant, I learned it was a mid-distance lens after all. I don't understand how someone could get away with something that brazen. This lens will now restrict the strength of the lens that goes into my remaining eye. I have no idea where to go nor what to do next to remedy this situation. I would think the hospital would have some concern for reputational damage from a surgeon doing something like this, completely disregarding a patient's explicit instructions and preferences. The example she sets as a professor of young doctors may cause them problems in the future if they adopt her communication style.
@RebekahsZ
@RebekahsZ Жыл бұрын
Dry eye specialist is kinda, sorta code for “I have too many openings on my schedule.” There isn’t really an ophthalmic specialty for dry eye. Any more than there is a specialty for dry lips. More than likely, when the schedule gets full, she will drop the dry eye credential.
@jamminjoy
@jamminjoy Жыл бұрын
@@RebekahsZ I took your advice and saw a cataract surgeon in a small private practice (6 doctors) for a second opinion. They have seen patients in the past who were unhappy with their treatment at Wilmer. The doctor verified the sight in my 2-week post-surgery eye as 20/25. So, despite the spat in the OR, I got pretty close to what I wanted in the end. Feeling greatly relieved now and even more determined to ensure that next time at Wilmer, there will be no further "mis- or non-communication". Thanks for your suggestion and thank you to Dr. Devgan for your excellent KZfaq channel. It is benefitting doctors and patients alike.
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