Saturday, 9 September 2017

BIOGRAPHY OF DR ONYEKWERE JIDEOFOR RANSOMED



Dr. Onyekwere Jideofor Ransomed a.k.a Son of the Kingdom was born into the family of Chief Onyekwere Felix Ugwa in Onoli, Awgu Town in Awgu Local Government Area of Enugu State of Nigeria on 5th September, 1986. He had his Nursery Education at Presentation Nursery School, Awgu. Thereafter, he was enrolled into Community Primary School, Awgu for his primary education, a school which was headed by his father. He was the fifth child of his parents. A quiet and obedient child who enjoyed staying at home to help his mother and older siblings in domestic activities. During his early primary school days, he mingled with his peers in childhood plays and adventures with little or no time for studies until he was motivated by his father who planted in him the seed of desire for academic excellence. Driven by this passion, he began to pay much greater interest to his studies both in reading and in writing which marks the beginning of his academic excellence evidenced by a dramatic change in the position he used to take in the class, from 25th position to 4th position.
As a means of demonstrating his scholarly tendency, he had written a letter to his father at primary four, whose content and grammatical expression displayed a great deal of intellectual maturity beyond his academic age. At primary four, he had already built a template for a formidable intellectual prowess as he never contested with anyone for the first position in the class. He had represented the school on several inter-school quiz competitions for which he won different awards and trophies.

On November, 1999, he was enrolled into the College of the Immaculate Conception (C.I.C), Uwani, Enugu for his secondary education where he continued to exude academic excellence and moral discipline. He had maintained the first position from the beginning of his secondary education to the end and was revered by his contemporaries who esteemed him to be a rare intellectual genius. He had won the scholarship award of the Old Boys Association of the school as the overall best student in class three and class five.
At class five, choosing between science and art class was almost challenging as the young lad was both arts and science inclined. He knew arts slightly more than science. At class four, his scores in  Literature, History, Government, Economics and Christian Religious knowledge ranges between 94 - 100% . However, due to the popularity of science in their days, he opted for a science class.

In the pursuit of science career, Dr Onyekwere J. R gained admission into the University of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN) to study medicine. He had his undergraduate clinical training at the University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital (UNTH), Ituku-Ozalla, Enugu. He is multi-talented. In addition to being a dedicated medical doctor, he is an enthusiatic preceptor imbued with deep sense of pedagogical ingenuity. His style of teaching has the propensity to awaken the sleeping intellectual faculty in every student that comes within his tutelage. He has taught a myriad of students who are now swimming in the ocean of intellectual affluence. He is a gifted writer who has written several smashing books both for academic and literary purposes. An artist that takes pleasure in drawing and painting. A great motivator with inherent ingenuity in stimualting the young academics towards maximizing their intellectual potentialities. Moreover, he is a Godfearing gentleman imbued with honesty, hardwork and generosity which form the framework of his personality.

THE TRANSCIENCE OF LIFE



Alive today
Archive tomorrow

Lives in the world today
Lives in the underworld tomorrow

Drives in a hiace today
Driven in hearse tomorrow

Goes to a sanctuary today
Goes to a mortuary tomorrow

Poses in a mosque today
Frozen in a morgue tomorrow
Thinks today
Stinks tomorrow

Lies in a couch today
Lies in a coffin tomorrow

Reads biology today
His biography is read tomorrow

Eats food today
Eaten as food tomorrow

Early to work today
Termed late tomorrow

Rich today
Enriches the soil tomorrow

Host in the cave today
Ghost in the grave tomorrow

Brought forth from the womb
Retuns back to a tomb

Oh  life, you are nothing
But a flash of lightning


A bundle of vanity
A  slight opportunity
A fragment of eternity



Thursday, 7 September 2017

THE LONGEST CLINICAL PRESENTATION



THE LONGEST CLINICAL PRESENTATION

It was a bright Monday morning. The rays of the sunlight descended in brilliant fashion upon the horizon without an iota of scorching heat. The sky was gorgeously adorned in its white -blue regalia. The whole atmosphere exudes a positive prospect. I looked around and nodded in affirmation. 'Today must be great!', I muttered to myself.
I had worked like a Trogan throughout the night in preparation for my clinical presentation. I had undergone so an in-depth study on the case that I've learnt it by heart and can recite it offhand. It's a day I had anxiously awaited to display my clinical ingenuity before my teachers and colleagues.
I stood by the bedside of my index patient asking further pertinent questions as regards the aetiology of the disease she had presented with so as to clear any hitch that may arise in the course of my presentation.
At about 7:30am some group of doctors in their white ward coats worn over T-shirt knotted with tie had begun to troop into the Female Surgical Ward which was the scene of the event.
A moment afterwards the whole atmosphere turned into boisterous one as a mammoth crowd of doctors had arrived exchanging pleasantries and discussing some medical issues.
A dead silence fell as soon as the moderator, Dr Nzekwe entered the scene and led the procession to the patient's bedside. At this juncture my confidence had almost begun to wane as I suddenly began to experience exaggerated sympathetic discharge evidenced by my sustained palpitations and asynchronous body movement. However, I tried to subdue it by taking a deep breath and thrusting my chest forward in a swagger of confidence.
I stood by my patient's bedside with my arms by my sides in a humble and obedience manner as we had been taught in the medical school. I was surrounded by my teachers and colleagues in such a manner that I appeared to be the cynosure of the whole events. Even the patients could see the difference between me and other doctors.
A deep silence fell. Zillions of unblinking eyes were steadily focused on me. The moderator flashed an intimidating hostile smile at me with a strong dreadful gaze that triggered a cold feeling down to the root of my nerve and my whole feet began to wobble. The whole atmosphere was tensed to a climax. In a jiffy and without preamble I was motioned to proceed with my presentation.
'I present Okoro Theresa, a 48year old female trader who lives at....' I began.
No sooner had I delved into the real nitty-gritty than I was stopped by the moderator for not describing the size of the breast mass in a supposed term that unequivocally and unambiguously depicts the mental picture of the mass.
'Is it the size of Arochokwu palm kernel or that of Okija or that of Isikwato or that of your village? ' he roared at me. I was startled. I had earlier described the mass to be of palm kernel size. The rationale behind the moderator finding fault with my descriptive term seemed to have eluded my mind. I had encountered several periodic interruptions before I could draw the curtains for my history and physical findings.
Hardly had I dropped my last sentence, when I was bombarded with a myriad of questions emanating from all angles beginning from the House Officers through my fellow Registers to the Senior Registers, Consultants and Professors.
The questions rained in torrents and landed on me like a barrage of bullets.
What is the stage of the tumour?
What in your history and physical examination can tell us about the stage of the tumour?
Is the patient in respiratory distress?
What are the first line investigations you will do for the patient?
Do you intend starting up chemotherapy for the patient today and why?
That was how the questions were spurting out in jets and each jet coincides my heart beat. I almost thought that the whole doctors had indulged in a conspiracy against me.
In a moment, I was swimming in a deep blue sea of unanswered questions. It was really a brutal clinical tussle. In an attempt to answer the first question in the multitude of questions presented before me, I was hammered with several further blows of questions emanating from my humble answer. This nearly tilted me into a state of acute confusional state. I was obviously losing my mental and clinical balance. 'If my first answer could yield three more malignant questions amidst a myriad of unanswered questions, this means that before I could answer half of the questions, I would have been consumed or even buried with questions'. I thought. Nevertheless, I persevered with a spirit of doggedness.
'Be courageous, it is not yet over, I suggested to myself. What appeared unfathomable to me was that my fellow registers with whom we had been struggling to lift our beings above the limits of stagnating natural phenomenon joined the consultants in unleashing even more malignant questions against me. I was tossed to and fro almost to a gasping point. I could decipher that a handful of the criticisms levelled against me were not only constructive but destructive, taking into cognisance of its detrimental effect in collapsing my whole body of confidence.
Like a lamb led to the slaughter house, I opened not my mouth in self defence of the criticisms. Like a sheep before its shearer I was submissive. I tried to the best of my abilities to answer the questions in quantum, at a slower pace within the limit of my adaptability so as not to attract more undue questions. A point of nemesis came when a fellow Register wanted to throw me off balance with a question regarding the tumour staging. The question caught the attention of the moderator who asked him in return to explain his reasons behind the staging of the tumor. He seemed to have brought himself to the hot seat and in a moment was made an object of ridicule.
It was in deed the longest clinical presentation. The hottest, irksome and herculean bedside presentation I've ever done. A case, I was physically and emotionally drained. The fact that I came out alive that very day was nothing but a mystery. 

SON OF THE KINGDOM STORY.....

AN OVERSIGHT IN HEROIC SURGERY



AN OVERSIGHT IN HEROIC SURGERY

It had been a hectic day after going on marathon ward round with my senior register. The round was a tedious one as we had been resuscitating many of our unstable patients. We spent most of our time on a certain lady at the casualty ward who had bilateral pleural effusion secondary to thoracic endometriosis with bilateral chest tubes in-situ draining haemorrhagic effluent. In the course of our physical examination, we discovered that she was in severe respiratory distress with coarse crepitation scattered throughout the lung zones and poor oxygen saturation. In a speed of lightning, we placed her on oxygen via a nasal prong and then commenced intravenous drug administration with the ultimate aim of stabilizing the pleural membrane to avert further rebound pulmonary oedema and to decongest the fluid accumulated within the alveolar space. After a prolonged intensive resuscitation, we left her bedside as the clinical signs and symptoms tremendously abated.
"Keep a close watch on this patient" my senior register instructed me. "Meanwhile, go and transfuse one pint of blood to the patient booked for surgery tomorrow at the female surgical ward". He added.
My senior register was an assiduous young man with a workaholic tendency. He works indefatigably round the clock without seeking an assistance except for a multiple concurrent tasks that demand an urgent attention as was the case at the moment.
He is also a daredevil, adventurous in surgical procedures. He had acquired a good deal of surgical skills during some years of private practice prior to his commencement of residency. He once told us how he would have done a liver transplant for a newly married couple in which the husband was diagnosed of decompensated liver cirrhosis if he had already attained the apex of the medical profession as a consultant.
I wondered how he would be able to do so taking into cognisance of the fact that organ transplant has never been done in our country hitherto. However, the confidence and logical coherence in his description on how to carry out the transplant seemed to have demystified every element of skepticism in my mind against his assertion. He said that the major challenge would be the green-eyed senior colleagues who would be hell-bent in withdrawing his medical license if they overhear such, regardless of how successful the outcome of the surgery might be.
This due to the unhealthy academic system we had been subjected in the country whereby the senior colleagues never believed that anything good could come out from their subordinates. As far as they are concerned, how dare you, a lower rank physician put forward an idea in their midst. Who are you and what do you know!
This is a colossal defect I had earlier noticed in our learning system which I had fervently prayed never to perpetuate during my period of consultancy. In my own thinking, knowledge is a natural process that should be allowed to flow freely. The least among all can raise the most powerful idea and the greatest of all can at times be erroneous. Hence, ideas and suggestions should not be treated based on isolated hierarchical source. Instead, every idea should be sieved in the laboratory of truth and the ones that pass through should be upheld while the residues are discarded. Through this means, medical par excellence and proficiency shall become the order of the day. However, this is not so in our environment. The whole situation negates open mindedness and critical thinking. The house officers and the resident doctors often feel hesitant to make suggestions in the midst of their chiefs (Consultants) for fear of unwarranted overt humiliating opprobrium and derision.
I trudged back to the female surgical ward to carry out the instruction of my senior register. The patient was a middle aged woman of 46 years who was being managed by the general surgery team for advanced metastatic breast malignancy. She had undergone radical mastectomy and thereafter was subjected to radiotherapy to destroy the remaining tumour deposits at the primary site of the tumour. In the course of treatment, she developed extensive anterior chest wall ulcer as a sequela of post radiation mastectomy.
The ulcer seemed to have been deteriorating as it went deeper and deeper involving the second, third, fourth and fifth anterior ribs which had become necrotic. The floor of the ulcer was covered with sloughs and necrotic debris exuding a noisome odour. The treatment of the patient had been essentially palliative as nothing else could be done medically to prolong her life due to the late presentation. She barely had few months to live based on the available prognostic factors.
This time the patient had been scheduled by the plastic surgery team for wound debridement. Our team, the cardiothoracic unit had been invited to assist in the surgery to avert any untoward injury to the major blood vessel based on the anatomical site of the ulcer with close proximity to the patient's heart.
Notwithstanding the assisting position assumed by our team, my senior register in his wonted tendency had proceeded to be at the helm of affairs in the management of the patient. For this reason, I was to transfuse the patient instead of the house officer of the plastic surgery team. I had typed and printed three copies of the elective operation list and submitted same to the perioperative nurses, the anaesthetists and the ward nurses. After transfusing the patient with a pint of blood, I informed her nineteen -year old daughter about the need for two more pints of blood as a prerequisite for the next day's surgery. She rallied around via a telephone call and other logistic manipulations until the two units of blood were secured.
I explained to the patient and her daughter about the surgical procedure she was about to undergo the next day and asked for their consent which was instantly granted. I then opened the folder to convert the abstract verbal agreement into a concrete one as the patient's daughter signed the terms of agreement in black and white.
A moment afterwards, I could see the patient's appearance changed dramatically. Her face was downcast and her head bent in a pensive mood as if she was contemplating on the outcome of the surgery. Moved by my usual humane tenderness and compassion, I drew close to her, not minding the disgusting odour, held her hand tightly and began to speak some encouraging words to her. In a jiffy her spirit was uplifted and she was reassured.
Just before leaving the ward, streams of thought began to flash through my mind. "Will this woman be able to withstand the general anesthesia considering her performance status?" I thought. "What if local anaesthesia is used?" I thought further.
Under the influence of irresistible persuasive force, I was compelled to approach my senior register to share my views and feelings regarding the patient. "I had thought along the same line with you" he said. "All the same ... he continued, let the consultant do whatever they have decided to do. They seem not to regard my opinion."
In the morning of the day of the surgery after the prolonged clinical meeting, we all headed towards the theatre. The patient was wheeled on a gurney by the orderly into the theatre.
We wore our theatre gowns, head ties, foot wears and face masks and then walked majestically into the operating room. The surgeons scrubbed and draped and the surgery began.
The plastic surgeon led the move for the debridement and the cardiothoracic surgeon followed giving the guide on where to cut and where not to cut. The ulcer was sufficiently excised until apparent healthy tissues appeared. The patient was bleeding profusely into the floor of the ulcer. I had collected the two units of blood from the blood bank and the anaesthetist began to transfuse her at a fast rate to avert any form of haemodynamic instability.
After much enthusiastic debridement, the wound was washed with dilute hydrogen peroxide and then irrigated with a copious mixture of normal saline and povidone iodine until every part of the ulcer appeared beef-red and healthy. The wound was then packed with sterile gauze covered with cotton wool and firmly held together with crepe bandages. The surgery was over.
The immediate post operative condition became so unstable that the anaesthetists had to move the patient into the intensive care unit for an urgent post operative resuscitation. Two hours later, I was informed that she had taken a walk to the netherworld. I felt so bad for having been associated with the surgery. I wondered what the daughter of the deceased patient with whom I have had good rapport would say when she sees me. Probably, she would say, "this is one of those that took my mother to the theatre and she never came back". Now, all the effort of the surgeons has ended in smoke. The death which was aimed at being delayed had eventually stretched forth its cold hand so untimely on the innocent victim.
"If the surgery had not been done, the patient would have lived fairly longer". I thought. The bravery behind the surgery seemed to have masked the patient's clinical undertone. It was indeed a heroic surgery on a background of clinical oversight. 

SON OF THE KINGDOM STORY...