If no improvement occurs, referral to a podiatric foot and ankle surgeon is appropriate. |
|
In 1901, a Scottish surgeon postulated that the disease he observed in the human intestine might be the same as Johne's disease in cattle. |
|
They gave approval to recruit a clinical team of consultant surgeon, radiologist and pathologist. |
|
They include a surgeon, an emergency physician, intensive care specialists, nurses and medics. |
|
The surgeon and assistant close the incisions with absorbable, interrupted, subcutaneous sutures and self-adhesive wound approximating strips. |
|
The nurses, anesthesiologists, medical technicians and aides who assist the surgeon are paid. |
|
My treatment decisions were respected and the surgeon had even arranged for the juicer to be installed in a little side kitchen! |
|
The nurse administers preoperative medications ordered by the anesthesia care provider or surgeon. |
|
The preoperative nurse or the anesthesia care provider administers a prophylactic antibiotic as requested by the surgeon. |
|
As we were waiting for our group to reassemble at the close of the session, a surgeon and nurse were pushing a patient into the hospital. |
|
Cap Lesesne, a New York plastic surgeon, hears from a lot of women worried about aging. |
|
We joined the swarming shoals of surgeon, basslet, butterfly fish, damsel fish, fusiliers and some bemused jack fish. |
|
Using this technique, the surgeon makes an incision in the back of the knee and retracts the calf muscle. |
|
From 1867 to 1890 he was an army veterinary surgeon, painting and sculpting in his spare time. |
|
He was wearing green scrubs and looked like a surgeon coming down the hall. |
|
Since 1964, every baby born in Taranaki Base Hospital's maternity unit has been tested by an orthopaedic surgeon. |
|
The parents are terrified, their fears not at all eased by being referred to a brain surgeon. |
|
The surgeon creates a scleral pocket by dissecting posteriorly, undermining the tissue with Wescott scissors. |
|
The surgeon can perform intricate procedures by using joystick-like controls to manipulate the surgical instruments. |
|
Five years later, the surgeon, writing under a pseudonym to protect himself from colleagues produced an insider tell-all. |
|
|
This might not be too bad if each surgeon carried out both techniques because there would be some sort of balance. |
|
For removal without stitches, the surgeon uses a scalpel to scrape off the mole so that it's level with or slightly below the skin. |
|
The surgeon uses a reamer and threaded tap to drill a hole to hold the titanium cage containing the bone graft. |
|
During coronary artery bypass graft surgery, a general surgeon is asked by the cardiac surgeon to harvest a saphenous vein. |
|
If an autograft is to be used, the surgeon should inform the surgical team from where the graft will be harvested. |
|
A stoma is an artificial opening to or from the intestine on the abdominal wall usually created by a surgeon. |
|
The patient is conscious at this point and is repeatedly examined by the surgeon or neurologist. |
|
Things ran on for about 18 months and I was then asked to go to Harley Street, in London, to see a surgeon appointed by the insurance company. |
|
Instead she went to the village barber who acted as the local surgeon and asked after the health of her opponent. |
|
Keen to pursue a career in medicine, at 14 he became an articled pupil to William Hardcastle, a Newcastle surgeon. |
|
When the surgery is complete, your surgeon removes the arthroscope and any other instruments and flushes the joint with a saline solution. |
|
During interposition arthroplasty, your surgeon removes any bone spurs or loose pieces of bone. |
|
Also called joint fusion, in arthrodesis your surgeon uses pins to hold your joint in one position. |
|
Upon receipt of the promised champagne and chocolates I can recommend a friendly brain surgeon, skilled in pre-frontal lobotomies. |
|
It is an obvious fact that a pediatrician would not need the same armamentarium as would the internist, the cardiologist, or the general surgeon. |
|
The surgeon opens the arachnoid membrane dorsal to the seventh and eighth nerves and continues the opening upward to the fourth nerve. |
|
It was possible that it might be needed for an emergency appendectomy being undertaken by the ship's surgeon while at sea. |
|
At this time, the surgeon begins to develop a dissection plane between the aorta and the pulmonary artery. |
|
He was a surgeon lieutenant in the navy and a major in the special forces for the sultan of Oman. |
|
Philpott is a consultant ear, nose and throat surgeon and rhinologist at University Hospital. |
|
|
The surgeon places two self-retaining retractors at right angles to one another to retract the longus colli muscles. |
|
The surgeon and assistant protect the sciatic nerve with retractors while dividing the hip capsule, leaving all possible structures intact. |
|
Easily visualizing the acetabulum, the surgeon places retractors, avoiding sciatic nerve injury. |
|
The surgeon makes the skin incision and places a self-retaining retractor to open the surgical wound. |
|
The planned relocation is due to the retiral of the Aberdeen transplant surgeon this year. |
|
An orthopedic surgeon at our facility wants to use an ordinary lead pencil to mark bone during a surgical procedure. |
|
They have received specialist training led by Stephen Attwood, a consultant surgeon at Hope. |
|
The anesthesia care provider then anesthetizes and intubates the patient, after which the surgeon performs prethoracotomy bronchoscopy. |
|
This team may include a neonatologist, a pediatric anesthesiologist, or pediatric surgeon, as well as neonatal nurses and nurse practitioners. |
|
The scrub persons drape the patient, and the surgeon infiltrates the surgical site with local anesthesia. |
|
The dilemma of the surgeon being asked to amputate a healthy limb is similar. |
|
A replant surgeon should be consulted when replantation is considered, but reattachment never should be guaranteed to patients. |
|
A zap through of news channels will reveal this rotund surgeon, laying claim to be the sole representative of Hindu sentiment in this country. |
|
Before using the measuring devices to determine the implant size, the surgeon inserts the fiber-optic laryngoscope. |
|
If there is any concern over the maintenance of ventilation, an endotracheal tube is placed by the surgeon via the laryngoscope.
|
|
If you simply believe you're young and behave youthfully, you'll look and feel the part, says plastic surgeon Bruce. |
|
Horses and ponies treated for laminitis by a veterinary surgeon during this period will then be re-assessed eight weeks later. |
|
Even solipsists look both ways before crossing a street and postmodernists, I suspect, submit their appendicitis to a surgeon, not a semiotician. |
|
This needle allows the surgeon greater control when placing the suture in tight spaces, such as the vomer area or posterior pharynx. |
|
There are the parish vestry, the parish infirmary, the parish surgeon, the parish officers, the parish beadle. |
|
|
The surgeon will make a cut in your lower abdomen and remove your appendix. |
|
The patient may seek consultation with a plastic surgeon for a face lift, mammoplasty, or abdominoplasty for removal of excess skin. |
|
A surgeon who has performed operations on different kinds of patients learns and perfects himself experimentally. |
|
Over the past two Olympiads she has made close personal friends of her surgeon, her rehabilitative physiotherapist and her sports psychologist. |
|
Government hospitals have a dental surgeon on duty day and night just like a regular duty doctor, Dr. Veerabahu says. |
|
Patients with critical limb ischaemia require urgent referral to a vascular surgeon. |
|
When aligned, the surgeon drilled into the medullary canal of the tibia and seated the tibial prosthesis. |
|
Without any exaggerated sense of self-importance, the 86-year-old surgeon sat in his spartan office room. |
|
Her surgeon and trainer both said she would have to drop some 20 kilos in order to heal in time for the Olympics. |
|
The surgeon closes the oral mucosa and muscle layers using braided absorbable suture in a horizontal mattress fashion. |
|
The surgeon implants four electrodes in the brain, then runs a wire under the skin to a battery-operated generator in the chest. |
|
For the newcomer proved himself to be a capable surgeon and an accomplished physician. |
|
I'd make an appointment with him or another accredited plastic surgeon to discuss your options. |
|
If a non-surgical approach fails, the patient is often referred to a surgeon. |
|
The surgeon performs a trial reduction by maneuvering the hip joint through range of motion. |
|
The plastic surgeon says he has done work on celebrities, but he won't name names because of patient confidentiality. |
|
The surgeon, therefore, suggested that the nurse add epinephrine to the plain lidocaine rather than waiting for the medication to be ordered and arrive from the pharmacy. |
|
Strange was a surgeon who lost the use of his hands in an automobile accident. |
|
My surgeon told me my bones were so soft he could barely install the screws. |
|
She volunteers to help find the brain surgeon but seems far more interested in Dexter. |
|
|
Although she trained as a cardiothoracic surgeon, childhood nerve damage prevented her from practicing. |
|
In his prime, a celeb cosmetic surgeon whose patients also included Elizabeth Taylor and Zsa Zsa Gabor. |
|
Patients with such implants should not receive an abrupt and unexpected communication from their surgeon that they now form part of research into an untested implant. |
|
But similarly, a new-age quack healer would disagree with a brain surgeon. |
|
An alcoholic veterinary surgeon from Yorkshire who turned up to work drunk and hurled abuse at animal lovers will now hear his fate in the New Year. |
|
The surgeon places a radiopaque sponge in the back of the neonate's throat to minimize the amount of blood ingested and then makes an incision along the hard palate. |
|
In radiosurgery, the surgeon doesn't need to cut into the patient at all. |
|
The surgeon removes the articular cartilage with graduated reamers in 1-mm to 2-mm increments until the deepened socket becomes a true hemisphere. |
|
Every eight miles or so was the country town, where lawyer, corn merchant, wool-stapler, saddler, veterinary surgeon, doctor, draper, milliner and so forth lived. |
|
After qualifying he served as surgeon lieutenant in HMS Montrose during the second world war, and after a period as an orthopaedic registrar he entered general practice. |
|
Since the surgeon can feel with his fingers the position of the bones and the degree of correction, X-rays of the feet are not necessary except in complex cases. |
|
The following year, a surgeon told her her career was over after she was stretchered off the track at the world championships with a ruptured Achilles tendon. |
|
Mr Lang, a retired veterinary surgeon, says he can still remember the thrill of seeing the lady's slipper in Yorkshire, long before it had to be heavily guarded. |
|
The surgeon then reinserts the endoscope, and the procedure continues. |
|
The surgeon also instructs the patient scheduled for surgical laparoscopy about the possibility of converting to a laparotomy if a malignancy is discovered. |
|
Dr. Neal is a spine surgeon who made a trip to heaven while drowning in a kayak accident in South America. |
|
Responsibility for the perioperative care of patients with chronic kidney disease is shared by the family physician, nephrologist, anesthesiologist, and surgeon. |
|
The surgeon told him that general anesthesia would be required. |
|
The surgeon frees up the affected segment of the bowel, removes the diseased portion, and rejoins the proximal and distal edges with a surgical anastomosis whenever possible. |
|
After the lead is implanted and tested, the surgeon closes the incision and general anesthesia is induced for implantation of the pulse generator. |
|
|
If a patient keeps going back to a specialist, particularly a surgeon, then hysterectomies, appendectomies and gall bladder operations are carried out unnecessarily. |
|
After a brief apprenticeship to a surgeon, and accompanied by an old schoolfellow, the innocent man travels to London, where he encounters various rogues. |
|
Mr Edwards, who is disabled and so can't help with the digging and preparation for the planting, instead uses his skills as a tree surgeon and arborist, to plan the planting. |
|
The surgeon makes a pair of additional lesions 10 mm to 15 mm rostral and caudal to the first at each ganglion site to destroy the entire fusiform ganglion. |
|
After prepping and draping the patient's extremity, the surgeon makes a stab incision and inserts the arthroscope into the knee joint through a standard inferolateral portal. |
|
Before starting the arthroscopy, the surgeon tests the cannula sites with a needle to see if the areas are numb or if additional local anesthetic is needed. |
|
Before closing the skin incisions, perioperative team members count all sponges, sharps, and instruments and report correct counts to the surgeon. |
|
How ironic it was, my father said, that as a young man he dreamed that his baby son would grow up to be a famous surgeon and play rugger for Scotland. |
|
From 1990 to 2008, Setchell served as surgeon and gynecologist to the queen. |
|
If this is not possible, the surgeon must determine whether the need to use an allograft outweighs the risk of sterilizing a contaminated autograft. |
|
He sent for a surgeon, who attempted to reduce the hernia by the taxis. |
|
Two of the carriers were a cardiothoracic surgeon and a perfusionist. |
|
In the mortuary there were scalpels sharp enough to cut through the toughest of leather, along with other surgical instruments that would make a surgeon proud. |
|
A little research in newspaper morgues proved the surgeon had died in a bizarre operating room fight with scalpels when other doctors accused him of unnecessary surgery. |
|
Although the tumour cannot be completely eradicated, Maxwell's surgeon has told her that tests have revealed it to be relatively benign, and her prognosis is good. |
|
In theatre, the surgeon saved her life again, stabilising her multiple fractures before she was sent off to the intensive care unit in the middle of the night. |
|
The surgeon places two clips distal to the intended line of division and one on the cystic duct approximately 5 mm from its insertion into the common bile ducts. |
|
She and husband Brad Pitt can presumably afford a kick-ass reconstructive surgeon. |
|
For information on BTS or retraining as a tree surgeon or arboriculturist, visit the careers section at www. |
|
The surgeon should avoid forceful traction on the cervix during morcellation, which can cause the vascular pedicles to avulse. |
|
|
Actress Arlene Tur portrays a surgeon who challenges the failing medical system and shifting government legislation. |
|
She thought of herself for a moment as a company president, brain surgeon, television newscastress, professional football coach. |
|
The surgeon lased the elongated soft palate, cutting off the excess tissue and stopping the blood flow in one swipe. |
|
James Braid, surgeon and pioneer of hypnotism and hypnotherapy, practised in Dumfries from 1825 to 1828 in partnership with William Maxwell. |
|
Benjamin Bell after being born in Dumfries went on to become considered the first Scottish scientific surgeon. |
|
The same day Defense Ministry's helicopter with rescuers, traumatologist and surgeon left for the scene. |
|
John Richardson, naturalist, explorer and naval surgeon was born in Dumfries as was John Craig, mathematician, and polymath James Crichton. |
|
Paramedics were about to call a surgeon to amputate when Euan was finally freed by shopfitters, who used a blowtorch to split the step. |
|
Sir Keith is the world's leading micro surgeon and the UK's only Professor of clinical traumatology. |
|
Have you ever felt like only a brain surgeon would be able to figure out how to use the microfilm and microfiche equipment at the library? |
|
But the surgeon found a hole in my cartilage and ended up having to give me microfracture surgery. |
|
A microsurgeon is a fully qualified doctor who has trained as a general surgeon then specialised. |
|
As with his other writings, the Travels was published under a pseudonym, the fictional Lemuel Gulliver, a ship's surgeon and later a sea captain. |
|
Nelson briefly came on deck to direct the battle, but returned to the surgeon after watching the destruction of Orient. |
|
Vienna was suggested by his friend Vernon Morris as a place to spend six months and train to be an eye surgeon. |
|
The surgeon must skeletonize vessels before coagulation, and must coagulate each vessel individually. |
|
All four babies died within a few months of surgeon Caner Salih starting at the hospital. |
|
Dental surgeon advised to continue analgesic therapy for pain in the left temporomandibular joint. |
|
He was rowed back to Theseus to be attended to by the surgeon, Thomas Eshelby. |
|
It didn't take a brain surgeon to realize that things were obviously in danger of going Pete Tong. It was time to back off. |
|
|
The president of HHC is Ramanathan Raju, MD, a surgeon and former CEO of the Cook County health system in Illinois. |
|
The emergency cars still answer all routine calls and one night a gentlehanded surgeon found himself helping to disarm a maniac with a shotgun. |
|
In 1941 Blyton met Kenneth Fraser Darrell Waters, a London surgeon with whom she began a serious affair. |
|
Althea is now re-scheduled with her surgeon for this spring. |
|
After trimming and reshaping, the surgeon reapplies skin over the shaped bones and cartilage. |
|
With PRK, or photorefractive keratectomy, the surgeon cuts away at the surface of the cornea. |
|
Where is the surgeon during remote control surgery and how does he manipulate the robotic arms? |
|
Then, chemotherapy was added to destroy small tumor growths that had spread beyond the reach of the surgeon and radiotherapist. |
|
The surgeon slips one into a slit cut into the anesthetized throat and then gets the recipient to sound out the alphabet. |
|
Later that month Reynolds suffered from a swelling over his left eye and had to be purged by a surgeon. |
|
Medicare requires nurse anesthetists be supervised by an anesthesiologist or surgeon. |
|
Julian Rowe-Jones, consultant rhinologist and nasal surgeon at London's Nose Clinic sees these issues on a daily basis. |
|
The mirror tells me I need to urgently consult a rhinoplastic surgeon, to get my nose in proper shape. |
|
Back in Brisbane on the Tuesday morning, I fronted up to have my knee checked out by Doctor Lars, an orthopaedic surgeon. |
|
He used the leg rope of his board as a crude tourniquet and that helped save his life, said surgeon Jack Ashworth. |
|
The chapel houses the tomb of Thomas Guy, and is the resting place of English surgeon and anatomist Sir Astley Cooper. |
|
Geoffrey Keynes, a British surgeon, developed a portable machine that could store blood to enable transfusions to be carried out more easily. |
|
Knowing that a patient has an adenomyoma can help the surgeon and the patient decide whether to have the surgical procedure in the first place. |
|
The washable cabretta leather Bionic Gardening Gloves were ergonomically designed by a hand surgeon and fit as snug as a batting glove. |
|
Intra-operatively, I assisted the surgeon to drain blood and clots, to detect the source of the bleeding and ligate it. |
|
|
At the age of 13, he was apprenticed to apothecary Daniel Ludlow and later surgeon George Hardwick in nearby Sodbury. |
|
If you need a Whipple, you'll want the most experienced surgeon you can find to do it. |
|
Al-Zawahri, an Egyptian-born surgeon, has been credited with bringing tactical and organisational cunning to al-Qaida. |
|
The treatment of PTA requires that the surgeon select the most appropriate antibiotic and the best procedure to remove the abscessed material. |
|
Returning to his native countryside by 1773, Jenner became a successful family doctor and surgeon, practising on dedicated premises at Berkeley. |
|
An oblique view of the operative field may predispose the surgeon to skive unilaterally toward a vertebral artery. |
|
Management of the untoward sequelae after failure of TMJ PT implants presents a significant challenge to the oral and maxillofacial surgeon. |
|
Assessment of subconjunctival haemorrhage and chemosis was made by the surgeon. |
|
The surgeon will scope the football player's knee to repair damage to a ligament. |
|
The surgeon tended the compound spiral fracture and bound the bone with kangaroo tendon. |
|
After Davy's father died in 1794, Tonkin apprenticed him to John Bingham Borlase, a surgeon with a practice in Penzance. |
|
He became firm friends with Thomas Bigg, a surgeon and the son of Lovelace Bigg, a gentleman from Wiltshire. |
|
A Scottish surgeon in the Royal Navy, James Lind, was the first to prove it could be treated with citrus fruit in a 1753 publication. |
|
The BINARY system allows the surgeon to place screws with greater angulation and engage the lock, without any extra steps or instrumentation. |
|
The surgeon would first place the limb on a block of wood and tie ligatures above and below the site of surgery. |
|
Than the kynge for grete favour made Tramtryste to be put in his doughtyrs awarde and kepying, because she was a noble surgeon. |
|
In fact, Smith says it was a tossup between heart surgeon and musician until he was a high-school senior. |
|
This would follow a pattern, where the status of the surgeon would flux in regards to whether or not there was actively a war going on. |
|
In 1770, Jenner became apprenticed in surgery and anatomy under surgeon John Hunter and others at St George's Hospital. |
|
A word of mention for Massimo Griselli, Max's surgeon at the Freeman Hospital, Newcastle. |
|
|
In health services, Kelvin Kong became the first Indigenous surgeon in 2006 and is an advocate of Indigenous health issues. |
|
He was the surgeon for Patrick Carr, who was one of the Americans shot during that incident. |
|
A surgeon was not required to wash his hands before seeing a patient because such practices were not considered necessary to avoid infection. |
|
A BRAIN surgeon sexually assaulted 10 female patients, a court heard yesterday. |
|
Top brain surgeon Paul May was using the fruit at The Walton Centre, which opened its doors for the day. |
|
A LYING brain surgeon who falsely told a patient he had removed her tumour was struck off yesterday. |
|
Ignorance because, according to an IT intelligence professor and a brain surgeon researcher, the brain is not meant to be used for excess memory. |
|
If the surgeon probes a nerve, the machine beeps in warning. |
|
Hans Harbst, a surgeon and radiotherapist in Chile, uses Rose Hip oil instead of Retin-A to treat dermatitis caused by radiation treatments, as well as to get rid of scars. |
|
Michael Morkin, an emergency room surgeon and the incoming chief of staff at Renown where the victims were taken, said both doctors were his friends. |
|
Cronin, Tobias Smollett and Edwin Morgan, and surgeon Joseph Lister. |
|
The surgeon refused to operate because the patient was her son. |
|
The veterinary surgeon carries out spayings almost every day. |
|
In 1854, Lister became both first assistant to and friend of surgeon James Syme at the University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh Royal Infirmary in Scotland. |
|
One team member, urological surgeon and andrologist Dr Demetris Demetriou, said that since 2008 more than 600 urology operations have been performed with excellent results. |
|
In his younger days he worked in a variety of fields, literarily, as a 'jackroo' and tree surgeon and went on to become a chauffeur and even a cross-country ski instructor. |
|
The surgeon... perambulated his couch three times, moving from east to west, according to the course of the sun... which was called making the deasil. |
|
Clinical implications of radionecrosis to the head and neck surgeon. |
|
For more information on advanced hair restoration procedures such as hair transplants, you should contact your nearest trichology clinic or cosmetic surgeon. |
|
From this wage, 6d per month was deducted for the maintenance of Greenwich Hospital with similar amounts deducted for the Chatham Chest, the chaplain and surgeon. |
|
|
But if you are a consultant surgeon who continually patches people up so they can go out and get chibbed again, then I would suggest we should all sit up and listen. |
|
The two of them rushed to Huskisson's side, joined shortly afterwards by Joseph Brandreth, a Liverpool surgeon who had been travelling behind Phoenix. |
|
A bloodstained glove and saw used by Wellington's personal surgeon Dr John Hume to amputate the Earl of Uxbridge's leg after he was hit by a case-shot. |
|
The system's modularity allows the surgeon to fit patient anatomy by independently adjusting the height of the modular body and stem without need for jigs or use of cement. |
|
In a retrocolic approach, the surgeon has to create an opening in the transverse mesocolon to bring the alimentary jejunal limb to the upper abdomen. |
|
The speed of the procedure by the surgeon was an important factor, as the limit of pain and blood loss lead to higher survival rates among these procedures. |
|
Within a month of starting, he was accepted as a dresser at the hospital, assisting surgeons during operations, the equivalent of a junior house surgeon today. |
|
Biopsies are sometimes carried out in the middle of a surgery, so that a surgeon can get the results quickly and make a decision on the spot about how best to treat a patient. |
|
My neph wants the oral surgeon to use nothing but Novacaine. |
|
Helping to change the lives of such deserving and sweet children born with cleft lips and palates made me feel proud to be a plastic and reconstructive surgeon. |
|
Typically it would have taken less than a minute for a surgeon to remove the damaged limb, and another three to four minutes to stop the bleeding. |
|
Surgery was oftentimes performed by a surgeon who knew it as a craft. |
|
Antonio Banderas plays Dr Robert Ledgard, a Frankenstein-like plastic surgeon who's obsessed with creating the perfect skin following the death of his wife in a car crash. |
|
His father, also named William, was briefly a naval surgeon, who later became a writer of novels and short stories, some of which were illustrated by his son. |
|
The USSR had several centers of excellence, such as the Fyodorov Eye Microsurgery Complex, founded in 1988 by Russian eye surgeon Svyatoslav Fyodorov. |
|
The plastic surgeon and assistant were scrubbed prior to induction and prepared to ligate the tumour immediately should it impair ventilation at any stage. |
|
Following his death, a memorial fund led to the founding of the Lister Medal, seen as the most prestigious prize that could be awarded to a surgeon. |
|
The development of radiological image intensification, in the 1960s, allowed surgeons to readopt closed nailing techniques with a much lower risk to patient and surgeon alike. |
|
A MIDLAND hospital is re-examining mastectomies performed on more than 500 breast cancer patients by a top surgeon who was experimenting with a controversial technique. |
|
In 1934, when I was five years old, I was admitted there to undergo an operation which the surgeon, Mr March, had not performed before, a double mastoidectomy. |
|
|
That autumn, Keats left Clarke's school to apprentice with Thomas Hammond, a surgeon and apothecary who was a neighbour and the doctor of the Jennings family. |
|
Vascular surgeon Christopher Lattimer was charged after police searched his home at Acol, Kent, last October, sparked by the international crackdown Operation Ore. |
|
The capability of the drill to spin in either direction allows the surgeon to seat or unseat screws faster than he or she could with manual or ratcheting drivers. |
|
Severin concludes his investigations by stating that the real Robinson Crusoe figure was Henry Pitman, a castaway who had been surgeon to the Duke of Monmouth. |
|
Professional photographer Amina learns from her somewhat unreliable mother that her father, brain surgeon Thomas Eapen, has be talking to deceased relatives. |
|
All in all he spent 11 years doing surgical registrarships and a stint in general practice as required by the South African Council to be registered as a specialist surgeon. |
|
Dilek TE-zE-n who works in the brain surgeon unit of the hospital. |
|
The 19th century French surgeon Pierre Paul Broca left an indelible mark in medicine with his observations on aphasia, language dominance, and cerebral localization. |
|