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The surgical nurse

Why having intuitive and skilled nurses in the operating room can make surgeons look good

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This picture has been used for representational purpose

This picture has been used for representational purpose

Dr Mazda TurelMicroscissors, please,” I requested, as I meticulously proceeded to split the sylvian fissure, a crevice which, when opened, separates the frontal and temporal lobes, providing a navigable labyrinth to deep targets without violating the substance of the brain itself. We were operating on an aneurysm of the anterior communicating artery that had ruptured. Opening a swollen and angry brain is way more complex than tempering a docile one. A neurosurgeon’s touch must be gentle and precise. Developing the right touch is the biggest challenge.

We performed the operation under the magnification and illumination of the microscope. It’s a big, burly gadget, often draped in a sterile plastic sheet that floats between the surgeon’s and patients’ head empowering us by enhancing sight well beyond the physiologic limits of the unaided eye. Five millimetre arteries appear like the huge underground pipes that transport water from one part of the city to the other. Even the slightest undue amount of traction or an inadvertent poke can result in the pipe bursting and flooding of the brain akin to the Mumbai monsoon.

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