
Originally Posted by
Far from massive
Congradulations, I have often felt if I had not mispent my youth that surgery would have been a great calling. The fact that you will be doing something that you can measure the outcome on each procedure is great, so many areas of medicine the ability to see the outcome is muddied by the patients compliance and so many other factors. Not to say this does not happen in surgery but compared to standard medicine where you are so often treating the symptoms rather than the problem, surgery is great.
Short story, after being sick for 6 months, I had my appendix pulled out about a year and a half ago, all was well till the next day when the surgeon told me it was full of Goblet cell carcinoids. Well the standard procedure for many surgeons is to go back in and take out half the colon and about 6-12 inches of intestine.....however I was very fortunate to have a great surgeon who did a great job of the surgery and also recommended me to another great specialist. The specialist got me hooked up with a brand new tumour marker test and said that due to the excellent job my surgeon had done he was confident that although the margin was only 2cm he still had faith that the cells were contained within the appendix. Well all the tests came back normal, I thank God every day that I was lucky enough to have two guys who were both on the cutting edge as if I had not (and they had done the cautionary surgery) I would no longer be able to eat and train and work the way I do.
FFM