Thursday, May 26, 2011

Let's Have Some Perspective

I got to do a hip injection on Tuesday. It was fluoroscopically guided so we could tell that we hit the right spot; the hip joint is deep and the bony landmarks are hard to palpate, so fluoro guidance is standard for hips. It was interesting to hear a radiologist's perspective on joint injection. He said he prefers doing all joint injections under fluoro to prove that he's in the joint space instead of accidentally injecting into surrounding soft tissue. This is a sharp contrast (no pun intended) to what the IM and ortho docs do. I wouldn't have given any credence to the idea that proper palpation and careful placement of a joint injection could miss the joint space in simple joints such as knee and shoulder. My radiology preceptor said he's had one or two cases where he was doing knee and shoulder injections and saw on fluoro that he wasn't actually in the joint capsule. Part of me thought, "Silly radiologist, leave the joint procedures to the orthopods, we'll do it right," but it's also good to know that something so simple can be a bit more complicated. Nonetheless, at this point in my training, experience, and understanding of things, I'm of the mind that it's not worth the extra time, expense, radiation exposure, etc, to use fluoro guidance for simple joint injections. This is a good example of how my fully-trained, well-experienced preceptors can arrive at different opinions of the best way to go about the same procedure. Extrapolating a bit, we arrive at the broadly-applicable "too many chefs spoil the broth" axiom.

This radiology rotation is only two weeks long, to finish off the month after my two-week nephrology rotation. I live in my primary rotation city, an hour from school, and my preceptor mentioned getting some hospital experience working with his partner at a hospital near school. I will soon do a rotation of nothing but hospital radiology, but a friend lives near school and I decided this would be a good opportunity to crash on her couch for two nights and spend time with her. Of course, we would get to talking, develop a deeper connection than we had yet discovered, decide to get to know each other better, somehow start dating long-distance, I'd get allergy shots to be able to deal with her cat, she would develop a love for sailing if she isn't enamored of it already, I would devise clever ways of cooking for her food intolerances, we would get married, sail the world, fulfill our mutual wanderlust with travels to far-off places and medical mission work, and have at least two kids.

I don't know how common this way of thinking is among med students, but I know several other student docs who plan a series of key events stacked back-to-back then catastrophize over the prospect of any one of the steps not playing out exactly according to plan. For example, a buddy was worrying about doing well on boards, so he'd be competitive enough to do an audition rotation at the residency location he wants, so he would have a better shot at getting into that residency, so he'd be better set up to get into the fellowship program at that location. Don't get me wrong, it's good to plan ahead, but I need to calm down and realize that there is more than one path to my ultimate goal and not freak out when one step along the way starts looking like it will fall through. To finish my earlier thought, I'm one night down, one to go staying at my friend's place, and I don't think we're connecting like I hoped. Now I'll never get married ;)

Scott

No comments: