CaseIndiaTrips 2

Destination: Pondicherry

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Posts Tagged ‘cipro’

Another one bites the dust

Posted by brianc79 on 22 August, 2008

Brooke is feeling better.

Paras is not.  Overnight, Montezuma’s revenge caught up with him.  Or should I say Shiva’s revenge.

We’re all experiencing varying levels of GI distress, from heartburn to traveller’s diarrhea.

Yesterday Tim was pimped by the Dr. Walsh of MGMCRI.  Pimped mercilessly as the rest of us watched.  I think he almost broke down in tears.  I’m kidding about the tears.

This occurred during one of the upper level medical school lectures, where it’s kind of like CPC format-stump the attending.  Although it was more of a teaching session where the attending (in this case the department head) went through the process of clinical analysis of a patient.  In this case it was a case of edema and ascites.  Clinically, I think he concluded that it was caused by one of the hepatitis viruses.  I don’t think there was even a discussion of laboratory investigations.

The poor man probably didn’t even speak English, and was sitting in this room for an hour and half, wondering why we were talking about him.

In the afternoon, we spent a few hours looking at microscope slides with Dr. Singh.  He pulled out various tropical parasites–malaria, leishmaniasis, filariasis and other worms–and even a slide showing Negri bodies of rabies.  It’s kind of cool because I remember pathology in medical school being quite boring–this is the liver…this is an abnormal liver….this is a kidney….this is MPGN….   It was fun to be able to see things under a microscope that we wouldn’t otherwise see in the US…and textbook plates just don’t do it justice.

They have malingerers in India as well.  However at 5000 rupees for an ICU admission day, and 1500 rupees each day afterwards, it’s kind of expensive to be a malingerer.  In the drama that is becoming our usual morning routine, a nursing student apparently went into convulsions.  She’s had evaluations done, including an EEG, at another private hospital which were all normal.  Our leading diagnosis now is pseudoseizures.

As for yesterday’s snake bite patient, they think that it was all hysteria induced.  They gave her a dose of antivenin, but decided to withold medications to see what would happen…and nothing did.  Whatever bit her was not likely poisonous.

Our excursion du jour for yesterday was to the Kailash Beach Resort, about 3 km down a side road from the Eye hospital up the main hospital.  Even though we weren’t supposed to, we snuck onto their beach and went for a nice long walk (please, no jokes about long walks on the beach).  It was very pretty, and it was sandy unlike the beach in the city.  If you walk far enough, you get to the public area where the fishing boats were pulled up onto land, and the fishermen were untangling their nets from the day’s work.

It was all very pretty, until I turned around and saw someone squatting bare-bottomed on the beach and realized these were not stray dog droppings that we saw along the way.

The resort itself has a beautiful pool, decent restaurant, and while very expensive by local standards, was quite reasonably priced.  We sat and drank a couple of beers while waiting for the restaurant to open, and in the meantime filled up on cashews, peanuts, and other Indian equivalents of beer nuts.  By the time the restaurant opened, we decided to just get “snack” sandwiches, which turned out to be triple decker sandqiches with cheese and fresh vegetables.   I picked the vegetables off, and hope that was good enough.  They even called an auto-rickshaw for us to take us home!

It was nice to finally have a nice walk where you didn’t feel the stifling heat.  The breeze off the ocean kept things nice and cool.

This morning on rounds, our last discussion was about methods of suicide attempts in India compared to the U.S.  What rolls into our medical wards and ICUs are things like Tylenol, anti-depressants, and prescription medication.  Here it tends to be more things in the community–pesticides, posionous berries that are used as decorations, etc.  Just imagining how many people attempt, but don’t make it to the hospital for care, or cannot afford care is just mind-boggling.  The population of Pondicherry is about 1 million–more than the City of Cleveland, but about half the population of the metro area.  And this little private hospital-one of dozens of private and government hospitals– that’s less than half full has at least 1 or 2 OP poisonings at a time.

Posted in Pondicherry | Tagged: , , , , , | 5 Comments »

We found the “R,” sort of

Posted by brianc79 on 21 August, 2008

I’m editing this post to explain the title. In our experience here, we have been lamenting that even though this is Mahatma Gandhi Medical College and Research Institute, there doesn’t seem to be a lot of research actually being conducted here.

Yesterday at MGMC&RI we finally met someone who was happy to be here and was doing something that resembles research. The Community Health department deals with issues of sanitation, hygiene, and health education, and it seems like they have pretty extensive programs in place.

The AP we talked to was excited to talk about the programs he was involved in, and had been here for (gasp) an entire year with no current plans of leaving.

Today, in typical Med-Peds fashion, Paras, Alicia, and I switched over to the medicine side and rounded in the ICUs with Tim. In the middle of rounds, the door flew open, the Casualty doctor ran in wheeling a young woman who had suffered a snake bite. As we watched her saliva frothing from around her mouth lying there almost unresponsive, Tim wisely wondered if her airway was intact. A bit of coughing with insertion of an OP airway told us that it was. They sent the intern down to the Pharmacy to see if we could get Antivenin. They usually give 10 vials at a few hundred rupees a pop.

Other things:

-Six American adults in one auto-rickshaw is a little cramped
-We ran out of gas on the way home last night. Fortunately there was an open gas station on the way. They had all their sodas lined up along the wall–a glass wall…which I’m sure gets mighty hot in direct sunlight.
-I might actually start enjoying a good cognac here and there.
-Alas, we have our first true GI casualty of the trip. Brooke is currently back at the dorm taking Cipro and Pepto-Bismol.
-no stache for me

Posted in Pondicherry | Tagged: , , , | 4 Comments »

From Brooke….

Posted by parask on 5 August, 2008

I think that it would be good to post the checklist of items that you all discussed at the meeting today…. so here it is!

Checklist:
– Got your hep a, cipro, malaria prophy, typhoid
– lock for suitcase
– photocopy of passport to you and loved one (who is able to fax if needed)
– obtain an ipod/update with your latest tunes.
– pack at least 2 weeks worth of underwears
– obtain Deet
– get medical stuff from Dr. Yadavalli for transport (?bag from Glynn)
– travel insurance
– brooke will join team CIT2 in Dulles on 8/13/08
– plan for wed sept 10th coverage with chiefs

Posted in Cleveland | Tagged: , , | 2 Comments »