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From the housestaff - one side of the story ...
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Title: My Year as Chief Resident
Contributor: Henry McIntosh: Chief Resident VAMC 1954-1955
It has been almost a half-century, 49 years, (1954-55) since I served
as Dr. James Warren's chief resident at the VA Affiliated Hospital. Dr.
Stead recruited Dr. Warren to the Department of Medicine from Emory in 1952.
Dr. Warren's major responsibility was to develop the Department of Medicine
at the newly established Durham, VA Hospital.
I recall that my year as chief resident was very busy because of the
multiple activities associated with establishing the new VA Service,
especially the Department of Medicine, the Cardiovascular Division and the
supporting laboratories. Dr. Warren was very interested in and skilled in
cardiovascular laboratory techniques. I was pleased that he expected me to
be very involved in all of the cardiovascular activities since I had decided
to specialize in Cardiology.
Dr. Warren remained at Duke only until 1958 when he became Professor
and Chair of the Department of Medicine at the University of Texas.
Although I was based at the VA, Dr. Stead expected me to participate
in many activities at the University Hospital. The resident physicians
rotated through services at both hospitals. Morton Bogdonoff was designated
chief resident at Duke. Our relationship was very close and I thought
beneficial.
I was very gratified that Dr. Stead arranged for me to have biweekly
"therapy sessions" with Dr. Bingham Dai. This experience was most
beneficial, not just for my personal life, but also my teaching and
administrative activities. I am confident that I have enjoyed a more
peaceful and productive life, even to this day, because of that experience.
I have always considered that serving as a chief resident was one of
the most beneficial experiences that I had in academic medicine.
Title: Alligators and their Bulbus Cordis
Some of my most memorable experiences occurred in the cardiovascular
laboratory. In the 60's we began to study, by catheter techniques, patients
with hypertrophic subaortic stenosis. During this we learned about the
function of the bulbus cordis, a muscle ring found in some hearts which
could cause serious problems similar to those in patients with subaortic
stenosis.
But we knew such a ring could serve a useful purpose in forms of life
that spent long periods of time both under water and on land, so we obtained
from a Florida reptile farm, with special permission from the Florida State
Wildlife commission, eight North American alligators, five to eight feet in
length.
We had learned that, as a result of having a bulbus cordis and being
poikilothermic (unable to maintain a body temperature higher than
environmental temperature), alligators can spend long periods of time
underwater as well as above.
In preparing to study an alligator, we put the subject "to sleep" by leaving
it in a walk-in refrigerator overnight. It's body temperature would become
about 50 degrees and it would become unresponsive.
When we were ready to study it, we would lay it on the catheter table
covered with ice chips to maintain a low temperature and hopefully sedated
state.
I recall the fear I had when an eight foot alligator we were
studying, between two patients scheduled in the catheter lab, warmed up
enough to regain consciousness. It opened its large jaws, despite having a
large chest incision and an intra-cardiac catheter.
My assisting nurse and technician both departed and left me with this
frightening situation. I injected anesthesia through the catheter into the
heart and the gator's jaws gradually closed and it again became unresponsive.
My assistants returned, appearing a bit "sheepish," and we completed
the study, the results of which were published in the Trans America Clinical
& Climatological Association Journal.
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