Tuesday, January 19, 2010

CNN correpondent performs brain op on warship January 19, 2010 - 1:11PM

ON BOARD THE USS CARL VINSON: Star CNN medical correspondent Sanjay Gupta, a practising neurosurgeon, has performed brain surgery on a 12-year-old Haitian girl aboard a US military ship.

The girl, whose name was not released, was injured in last week's devastating earthquake, and was diagnosed as having a 1.2-centimetre chunk of concrete embedded in her skull.

The ship's surgeon called for a neurosurgeon, who are in short supply in the region amid the mammoth and often chaotic rescue and recovery operation.

With the help of a CNN producer, we called CNN in Atlanta who then patched us through to Dr Gupta in Port-au-Prince," the Vinson's deputy public affairs officer Erik Schneider said.

"Someone got a hold of our international desk," Dr Gupta, 40, later recalled.

"They said there was an urgent call from the Carl Vinson. So I put a call in to them and there was something about a head injury."

Assisted by Los Angeles surgeon Henri Ford and the ship's surgeon Kathryn Berndt, Dr Gupta pulled off the surgery on Monday between his multiple reports for the international news network on the massive quake that hit the Caribbean nation.

A US Navy news report confirmed the events and added that a second operation was needed to remove a sliver of debris in the girl's skull that the medical team could not initially reach.

The girl was "neurologically intact and there wasn't any penetration of the brain," said Dr Ford, originally from Haiti.

Dr Gupta and Dr Ford said they anticipated the girl would make a full recovery.

"I was honoured to help out," Dr Gupta said afterwards.

"I have a profound respect for the capabilities of the US Navy and the medical team on board the Carl Vinson."

Dr Gupta was considered for the post of US President Barack Obama's surgeon general but withdrew his name in March last year due to family and career reasons.

AFP

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