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Old 05-09-2008, 07:38   #1
SF-TX
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Man Saves Own Life, Uses Steak Knife for At-Home Tracheotomy

This is impressive. If he was unable to move air, his window of opportunity to correct the situation would have been rather short.

Quote:
Man Saves Own Life, Uses Steak Knife for At-Home Tracheotomy

Friday , May 09, 2008

AP


OMAHA, Neb. —
An Omaha man struggling to breathe used a steak knife to perform an at-home tracheotomy.

Steve Wilder says he thought he was going to die when he awoke one night last week and couldn't breathe.

Wilder says he didn't call 911 because he didn't think help would arrive in time. So, the 55-year-old says, he got a steak knife from the kitchen and made a small hole in his throat, allowing air to gush in.

Wilder suffered from throat cancer and related breathing problems several years ago. About that time, he had an episode where he couldn't breathe because his air passages swelled shut. He says that's what happened this time around.

Doctors don't expect Wilder to suffer any adverse effects from the tracheotomy once it's healed.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,354655,00.html
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Old 05-09-2008, 08:59   #2
swatsurgeon
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Not sure but an educated guess....he had a trach previously and cut through the scar which is really only skin and re-entered his airway. I have used the technique myself on previously trached patients.
Not taking anything away from his heroic procedure, just nice to know all of the facts and true degree of difficulty that the press likes to sensationalize.

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'Revel in action, translate perceptions into instant judgements, and these into actions that are irrevocable, monumentous and dreadful - all this with lightning speed, in conditions of great stress and in an environment of high tension:what is expected of "us" is the impossible, yet we deliver just that.
(adapted from: Sherwin B. Nuland, MD, surgeon and author: The Wisdom of the Body, 1997 )

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The blade is so sharp that the incision is perfect. They don't realize they've been cut until they're out of the fight: A Surgeon Warrior. I use a knife to defend life and to save it. ss (aka traumadoc)
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Old 05-09-2008, 09:17   #3
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Granted, the procedure itself is not difficult. What I found interesting is that I've never heard of anyone performing the procedure on themselves. It is always easier 'operating' on someone other than yourself; "operator feels no pain".
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Old 05-13-2008, 23:15   #4
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if it worth saying, it will be quoted.

Last edited by Red Flag 1; 03-17-2018 at 09:06.
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