

Today was my third day working at the Fundación Cardiovascular with Drs. B. Monday and Tuesday Dr. B and I, along with the other vascular surgeons on our team, spent most of the day in clinic visiting with patients and doing Duplex studies, which is essentially ultrasound of the different vessels, depending on the case. I saw patients with vasculitis, carotid disease, stenosis, calcifications of vessels, and many different forms of peripheral diabetic vascular pathology. The surgeons showed me CT scans and MRIs of several recent patients with different kinds of aneurisms.
While passing through the pediatric ward with Dr. B, we saw an entire family with an acute case of Chagas, which is an infection from a parasite that sometimes causes cardiac failure and even the need for a heart transplant. The family had brought one of the bugs bit them, called the "pito", which is a "phlebótomo", or blood-sucker.
Today was my first day in surgery. While scrubbed in with one of the fellows, I assisted in a vein stripping of a woman's leg who had "várices", and while exiting the operating room, we found Dr. B operating on an amputee patient who had ruptured her axillary-femoral bypass bedside. When they arrived in the OR, all of the rooms were taken and the rupture repair was being done in the hallway of the OR floor.
I also get to accompany Dr. B to the morning meetings where we discuss different patients with the other surgeons and decide the best treatment for them. I am learning so much about vascular surgery, but also improving my Spanish because I do not speak English all day long. Even writing this blog is difficult for me today because I am starting to think in Spanish grammar!
After I got home from the hospital, I went with Sofia to the mall where we looked for white sandals for me to wear with my white dress to the party at the "club campestre" this Saturday (the dress code is all white), but none of the shoe stores had my size! I guess women with skis for feet are not so common here... Eventually we found some, and the price translated to 10$. Then we had manicures at the country club for the party this weekend, and they were 3.50$. I think me and Colombia are getting along just fine...
Above I have included a picture of me watching the surgeons search for a popliteal pulse in the only remaining leg of the patient that had been operated on after rupturing her bypass. As you can see, we are in the hallway. I also included a picture of me and Dr. and Dra. B in our office, where I study vascular surgery journals and patient reports in Spanish in between clinic and surgical cases.
xoxokr