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Working in a Very Small Place: The Making of a Neurosurgeon

Working in a Very Small Place: The Making of a Neurosurgeon

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: also
Review: Due to the review below, I was reluctant to buy this book, but I'm glad I did. It is one of the better books on neurosurgery. It chronicles the early career of Peter Janetta (Director of Neurosurgery at Pitt) and his "discovery" that decompression of the Fifth Cranial nerve will relieve the pain of Trigeminal Neuralgia. This book is similar to Healing Blade by Edward Sylvester, in that both books use an outside observer to descript the world of neurosurgeons to the reader. They use historical references (ie. Harvey Cushing and Walter Dandy, two pioneer neurosurgeons) to help us to understand the political battles that occur backstage as well as battles that hinder the progress of medicine. This book has great descriptive passages that makes the reader feel like one is inside the OR with the surgeons. It also makes the reader feel like one knows more about the techniques in question. It is also an immensely entertaining read because it teaches us about so many things. There are technical descriptions, historical references, touching case reports and a-day-in-the-life-of-a-neurosurgeon type of stories that attach the reader to the hips of the neurosurgeon as he rounds on patients, goes to the OR, goes to another OR and yet another OR, and then goes to a conference, and yet another conference.....what a life! If you are a medical student pondering about neurosurgery, read this book before investing 4 weeks in a neurosurgical elective! I love this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great read!
Review: Due to the review below, I was reluctant to buy this book, but I'm glad I did. It is one of the better books on neurosurgery. It chronicles the early career of Peter Janetta (Director of Neurosurgery at Pitt) and his "discovery" that decompression of the Fifth Cranial nerve will relieve the pain of Trigeminal Neuralgia. This book is similar to Healing Blade by Edward Sylvester, in that both books use an outside observer to descript the world of neurosurgeons to the reader. They use historical references (ie. Harvey Cushing and Walter Dandy, two pioneer neurosurgeons) to help us to understand the political battles that occur backstage as well as battles that hinder the progress of medicine. This book has great descriptive passages that makes the reader feel like one is inside the OR with the surgeons. It also makes the reader feel like one knows more about the techniques in question. It is also an immensely entertaining read because it teaches us about so many things. There are technical descriptions, historical references, touching case reports and a-day-in-the-life-of-a-neurosurgeon type of stories that attach the reader to the hips of the neurosurgeon as he rounds on patients, goes to the OR, goes to another OR and yet another OR, and then goes to a conference, and yet another conference.....what a life! If you are a medical student pondering about neurosurgery, read this book before investing 4 weeks in a neurosurgical elective! I love this book.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: also
Review: I read this book and found it interestinig in learning about the world of neurosurgery.
Another book, 1-4134-0609-2, A Pained Life, a chronic pain journey, tells about one patient's experience with the disorder Trigeminal Neuralgia. This is the pain problem that Dr. Jannetta's surgery is for. The author of Pained Life was operated on by Dr. Jannetta, along with other doctors, and tells of her personal encounter with him and others.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Well written, provides insight into neurosurgical practice.
Review: Mr. Shelton has written a well researched book. I find it specifically interesting in the fact that the doctor, Dr. Jannetta, allows the author a glimpse into the admitted as well as the often unadmitted; the surgical practice of "ghost surgery". (I no longer have the book so I may be wrong about page citiation but I believe it is approximately page 252.) The author relates an anecdote told by a resident about the time he wanted to operate on a woman with a brain tumor who had just given birth. Although Dr. Jannetta at first tells the resident not to operate because of the potential danger to the patient the resident persists and Dr. Jannetta relents. The author goes on to tell how the patient died and Dr. Jannetta, who had not been in either the O.R. or the hospital, comes in in the middle of the night to commiserate with his resident. It is not often, if ever, that a doctor admits publicly that he, by his actions, endorses 'ghost surgery'. This book gives the reader an entry into an often secretive and closed world. Neurosurgery seems to be the most highly regarded, feared and unknown of the medical specialties. For anyone curious about the life of a neurosurgeon, this is one of the books I would recommend.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A peek into the world of a neurosurgeon
Review: Shelton writes as an outsider - albeit, as a science journalist, a very informed one - looking in on the world of neurosurgery. Specifically, he looks in on the world of neurosurgeon, Peter Jannetta.

Jannetta is a bold, charismatic man who has made his name despite detractors and carved out a subspeciality where others had failed to do so. Based on a few subtle observations, Jannetta revitalised a theory of microsurgical decompression for cranial nerve disorders such as trigeminal neuralgia, a condition of excruciating facial pain that drives some sufferers to suicide. Jannetta, against the tide of opinion, chose to go into tiger country at the cerebellopontine angle deep within the brain and lift tiny, sometimes microscopic, vessels away from the nerve and hold them away with small pieces of fluff. Established contemporary neurosurgeons were largely up in arms that a young upstart resident would perform potentially dangerous surgery when a safer alternative (of destroying the nerve distally) existed. Jannetta, with charm, stubbornness and unshakable self-belief held onto his view and over a period of years forced his procedure to be accepted. Sheldon documents his persistance with admiration and recognition of the historical context of this work.

In explaining this neurosurgeon's world, Sheldon explains to those on the outside the terminology, anatomy, clinical process and US referral system. Although his explaining these things in explicit detail slows the pace at times, it is probably better that he occasionally bores a few cognoscenti than baffles or alienates the lay reader.

In the best part and heart of the book, Sheldon has been invited into the inner circle and in his apparent shadowing of Jannetta, has built up a brilliant picture of a brain surgeon's daily work. Sheldon describes conferences, tutorials and closed-door morbidity and mortality meetings in an engaging and intriguing way. With the vitality of Jannetta central to the story, it is an entertaining coffee- and cigarette-fuelled rollercoaster ride. Sheldon has crammed a vivid personality, a packed daily schedule and the painful experiences and desperate histories of patients into a powerfully-told, brilliantly-painted portrait.

In the brain-book genre, this is most similar to A Scapel's Edge, describing another neurosurgeon (whom, I think, specialised in aneurysm surgery), rather than When the Air Hits the Brain, or the general surgery based Complications, which were written by surgeons themselves rather than journalist observers. Whilst probably not stealing the podium from my favourite brain-book, this is certainly an intriguing, enlightening, and most importantly, entertaining read.


dr_sasp

Incidentally, I got my copy from books4u2enjoy. It arrived quickly, long before the predicted date: one week from USA to UK. I was slightly disappointed in the condition, as it was a bit bent and faded - not the very good condition that I had purchased. Nevertheless, to read a rare book, I'd recommend that you go through Amazon and buy it from one of the linked sites, as, like this one shows, the books are usually well worth a read.


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