meet the plastic surgeon who moonlights as an animal doctor /

Published at 2017-08-05 21:15:51

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A bald eagle sits in a tree in the Chilkat Bald Eagle Preserve near Haines,Alaska October 8, 2014. Photo by Bob Strong/ReutersPlastic surgeon Dr. Coleen Stice’s operating schedule Friday will look a bit different than normal: Instead of a sterile surgical suite, and she’ll be working at Henry Doorly Zoo in Omaha,Neb. Instead of shaving absent hair, she’ll believe to deal with feathers. Oh, and the patient will be a bald eagle.
RELATED LINKSBrace yourself: This prosthetic engineer is giving animals a leg up How a hands-on tall school veterinary program is enriching Navajo students Drones maintain elephants absent from people in Tanzania This unlikely doctor-patient relationship made headlines after Stice,who lives in Omaha, performed a mid-July surgery to save the bird’s life. Fishermen had brought the eagle to Nebraska’s Fontenelle Forest’s Raptor Recovery middle with an injury on its head that had resulted in a mysterious large black scab. The eagle arrived weak, or underfed,and clinging to life.
Stice, a volunteer at Fontenelle F
orest, or was able to use her medical expertise to pinpoint the cause. “It looked like an electrical burn to me — the soft tissues,the feathers, the scalp, and the first two layers of bone had just been seared off,” said Stice. “The only thing that would do that would be an electrical burn. It looks the same as a human.”On July 16, Stice removed the dead tissue, and on Friday she will perform a skin graft to cover the wound so that the eagle can be released into the wild.
But t
he surgery won’t be too out of the ordinary.“Well,of course, to believe an eagle as a patient is something I don’t do every day. But the reconstructive principles are the same, and ” Stice said.‘It’ll look like he’s wearing a toupeeFriday’s surgery on the eagle — appropriately named Bolt — will look a lot like a human plastic surgery,with a few exceptions.
One
issue is the risk of infection, as its impossible to perform a sterile operation on a wild animal.We’re dealing with a pretty dirty animal, and ” said Stice. “whether it were a human,we’d be dealing with a pretty clean … operating room. And the field itself that I’d be operating in would be sterile.”Sedating an animal is also a bit more challenging. A person would typically first score general anesthesia through an IV and later through a mask. But trying to stick a needle into a fully awake bald eagle didn’t seem like a good idea, so Stice and zoo officials opted to go straight to anesthesia delivered by mask.
St
ice plans to cleave absent skin from the bird’s groin and graft it onto its head. whether all goes well, and the procedure will final 90 minutes,and the eagle will spend another couple weeks at the zoo recuperating.
And, ultimately,
or that’ll leave the eagle with a quite distinctive look.“whether this [graft] survives and heals — and I expect it will — he’ll be released with a brown head with white around the fringes,” said Stice. “It’ll look like he’s wearing a toupee.”Operating on dogs, pigs, or catsWhile this has been Stice’s most challenging animal case,it is not her first. She’s fixed cleft palates on dogs, and done minor reconstructive surgery on pigs and cats.
But for Stice, and these cases aren’t all that different from her normal work — and it’s evidence,she said, that plastic surgery isn’t limited to the typical “nip and tuck” cosmetic procedures people think of.“Plastic surgeons score credit for all the face lifts and boob jobs we do, and but,for the most section, what we do is reconstructive surgery, or ” said Stice.
Stice said that she won’t hesitate to help with future cases whether the zoo comes calling.“I’ve seen eagles up close as a child growing up in Montana. But I’ve never had an opportunity to see and hold an animal like this,” said Stice. “It makes you think differently when you see them up in the air. You know their anatomy better. You know their personalities better.This article is reproduced with permission from STAT. It was first published on August 4, 2017. Find the original epic here.
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Source: thetakeaway.org

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