Thursday, January 3, 2013

Gut Check

The other day we were consulted to see a patient in whom they had discovered a pancreatic mass. This type of consult carries with it a mix of emotions. It usually means pancreatic cancer – a deadly diagnosis that often claims the life of its victim quite rapidly. Conversely, pancreatic surgery is some of the most challenging and rewarding operating there is. In a perfect world, we cure these individuals in fantastic manner. This patient was not the healthiest I’d ever seen. Pancreatic cancer normally strikes elderly, sickly folks, and this gentleman was no exception. He had smoked enough for two lifetimes, and it took its toll on his lungs and arteries. To even consider operating on a guy like this meant a meticulous pre-operative work-up. A work-up so involved, in fact, that we wanted to transfer him to a larger hospital because they had a greater ability to run more thorough tests. He was hesitant. He liked the hospital he was in – he felt comfortable, and it was close to his home so his wife could visit easily. She’d never be able to see me down town, he said in complete earnestness, even though it was hardly a fifteen-minute ride by car, bus, or train. It might as well have been half way across the country, to hear them talk. We argued gently. This was cancer, after all, and the bad kind – the kind that kills, and painfully, too. We weren’t even at the point to offer surgery. We just want to run some tests, and talk to some specialists….we just want to see if we can even do the surgery. Can’t we do it here? No; not well. We need you in a larger facility. He looked me in the eyes. I just have a bad feeling, he said quietly, his oxygen tubing snugly in his nose. Doctor…have you even had a feeling that something just wasn’t going to work out? Of course. Of course I do. Al the time. It’s my job to worry about the worst-case scenario, and to put my patients in the best possible position to survive should something catastrophic happen. Ok, he conceded, you’re right, I’ll go. But I just don’t think I’m going to make it. He went quietly. He thanked us and smiled. Two days later he was dead. I don’t know what happened, and nobody does. A heart attack, or a pulmonary embolus? He was in the hospital getting his myriad of tests and he just coded and died. Just like that. I guess he was right, this wasn’t going to work out for him. He knew something none of us did. He should have ignored us and just gone home. He should have – we all should have – listened to his gut.

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