does it require greater psycho motor control and hand to eye coordination than other surgeries?
Yes
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does it require greater psycho motor control and hand to eye coordination than other surgeries?
OMG ! i have been really impressed by the doctors in ophth, and enjoyed the rotation, but this is scary. what if during learning i make countless people blindYou need to move instruments fractions of a mm with your hands.
OMG ! i have been really impressed by the doctors in ophth, and enjoyed the rotation, but this is scary. what if during learning i make countless people blind
I don't think it's that much harder. I've spent a lot of time with an ophthalmologist in the summer and he said that like with any other surgery it just takes practice. He said that we're not better than anybody else because we do microscopic surgery, and that we just practice.
Everything I do has to be calculated and accurate. That type of thinking doesn't lend itself well to macroscopic surgery. They tear s*** up and shrug it off. That would drive me crazy. I'm an early resident, but the little experience I have with Ophtho just fits me better. It's clean and precise....
Ophthalmic surgery ideally requires a steady and delicate hand, characteristics which can be taught -- to an extent. It is not for everybody, especially those without full stereo vision.
I'm curious. What field of surgery do you consider un-calculated and inaccurate, dirty and imprecise? Sure, there may be more blood and guts in general surgery or orthopaedics, but no one is going around chopping people up willy nilly as you seem to imply.
It may not seem uncalculated in comparison to most things; however, they are relatively uncalculated. I'm not saying that in a bad way. It takes bravery to cut into the unknown. If you think they always have a good idea of what is going to happen, and where they are at all times you are wrong. Some patients, especially those with extensive surgical histories are like hacking through weeds. It's like cutting through adhesion after adhesion trying to find a landmark to work off of. A single movement in general surgery (say a port placement) requires movement that is several inches in precision. The size of the port is the size of the eye...You literally can't compare the two. I'm not saying they are sloppy. I'm saying they can't afford the level of precision we depend on. They need to get the job done. Our intraocular lens shifts 1mm and our calculation is messed up. You can't go by mm in gen surg. There would be no way to get the job done. I loved the field, but I could never do it because they have to have the confidence to go in the completely wrong direction. Again, I have a ton of respect for the field, but there is no use in comparing them.
You can do macro surgery and still be steady. If you don't eat, sleep, and watch your alcohol intake the day before microsurgery you can have a little tremor. Small adjustments make a big difference in micro surgery. Yes it's true that you learn and it's what we do. And many people turn out as fine surgeons. Certainly nobody says we are better than anyone else, but I do believe in is more challenging and takes longer to master.
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No, ophthalmologists practice on avg longer than other surgerons and even general practitioners- this is a paraphrase of a quote by the president of AAO b/c 1) they love what they do 2) you can still practice ophthalmology while not doing surgery- make less money but when you're 85, drive a jag, and have 3 kids who support you, you probably don't care about money anymore.
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