What is remarkable to me is that men are willing to put their mouths on that thing once it's been stretched out like that.
Yay for C-sections!
What is remarkable to me is that men are willing to put their mouths on that thing once it's been stretched out like that.
Yay for C-sections!
my friend had a ceserean, and her husband was in the room. With the screen, and everyone telling him not to look, somehow he managed to peek, and he can't believe the way her body was pulled open and he could see inside.
he appreciates her a bit more.
and what if you need stitches, ergh
Gee..I thought I saw a pussycat. ~PCD
Kids are disgusting.
Don't expect anything.
Good god, no you wouldn't. You don't know what I've seen.
If I ever actually have children--which I won't--I'd have to have my eyes pinched shut the entire time. Oh god. I know I'd be one of those dads that falls over and faints. Birth is so incredibly disgusting.
God, so atrocious in the Old Testament, so attractive in the New--the Jekyl and Hyde of sacred romance.
-Mark Twain
If people are good only because they fear punishment and hope for reward, then we are a sorry lot indeed.
-Albert Einstein
Vash, not sure why I thought about this right now, but I was curious about what you've seen regarding this:
A patient I had in one of my clinicals is a paraplegic. He has three ulcers, about stage 3/4. They are some of the worst ulcers I've seen... because usually the ones I treat are just stage 1, just about the top layer of skin is gone. This guy had holes, probably about 2.5 inches deep and then they are about 2 inches wide and long... perfect circle. The one on the coccyx is even bigger, about 3 inches deep, and about 3 inches wide and long.
And that's just what I could see... not even sure how many little tunnels there were in there. It takes about 5 Aquacell pads and some gauze to pack those wounds up. Have you seen any ulcers that big?
Yes, and they aren't even especially rare, I'm sorry to say. Lots of patients coming in from convalescent care have really nasty pressure ulcers. I also did a rotation in a trach facility where all the patients were quads. The most recent admits usually have big ulcers on the coccyx, too.) The good news is that they have eaten through the nervous tissue by the time they are late stage 3 - stage 4, so the patients are actually in less pain than they are with stage 1 or 2.
I was actually thinking of specializing in wound care, but they don't have any courses in California... I am going to have to consider going out of state if I want to go that route.
Have you had any MRSA post-debridements yet? I had a woman who had all the tissue down to the bone removed from her entire calf and round through the heel. It was awesome the way they were getting the tissue to regenerate.
Last edited by shh!; 18-07-08 at 07:34 AM.
How many quarters is your LPN program?