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Reflections in a Head Mirror

Reflections - Archive

3/21/2013

Signs of Obsolescence

Tell me to what you pay attention and I will tell you who you are.
-Jose Ortega y Gasset    

The senior resident hauled our little band of medical students down to the radiology file room. As he dug through the heavy manila x-ray jacket searching for films, he told us the patient’s story. “This 63-year-old lady was really sick when she came in. Heart attack a couple of years ago. New trouble breathing. Swollen ankles. She was miserable. She was in the ICU for over a week.”  

He slid one x-ray after another from the jacket, searching for the chest x-rays that had been taken with a machine rolled to her bedside in the intensive care unit each morning.

“Aha! Here they are!” He snapped the films up onto a series of light boxes and pointed to the one on the left. “Okay, students. This is the chest x-ray from the emergency room the day she was admitted. What do you see?”  

We were on our first hospital rotations. We had a pretty decent understanding of anatomy, biochemistry, and pathology, but knew little about clinical medicine. We stared at the x-ray and said nothing.  

“Okay, people. Look closely. Describe what you see.”  

“Well,” said the bravest among us, “the lungs are here. Here are the ribs and the spine. Here is the heart and the blood vessels. Oh, the diaphragm is down here.”  

“Good, good. That’s a start. So what do you see that is different from a normal x-ray?”  

This was tougher because we had so little experience with either normal or abnormal images. We stared blankly.  

“C’mon. The radiologist has left you some clues. What do you see?”  

We leaned in close. At the edge of the lungs near the diaphragm, someone had drawn red pencil marks on the film, pointing out several short parallel lung markings. “Those red wax marks, my friends, point to some Kerley B lines, named after the Irish radiologist Sir Peter Kerley. The lines are seen most commonly in congestive heart failure. They disappear as the failure clears up.”  

We looked at the series of chest x-rays and, indeed, the lines resolved as she improved. The resident spent a few minutes describing the radiologic signs of heart failure.  

“Okay, students, what lessons did you learn here?”  

We repeated back what he had taught us about the x-ray findings in heart failure. We reached into our lab coat pockets for our notebooks and wrote “Kerley B lines = CHF.”  

“I learned something else,” said one of the other students.  

We all looked at her.  

“ALWAYS look for the red pencil marks. If the radiologist was interested in a finding on the film, I should be, as well.”  

The chief resident smiled. “Very good! Those marks on an x-ray are a sign of disease as certainly as any clinical finding at the bedside. We call the marks “The Wax Pencil Sign.” Always look for them. They can save your butt in the middle of the night.”    

Wax PencilOver the years, light boxes have all but disappeared from hospitals. Voice-recognition software and electronic medical records have made radiology reports available almost instantaneously. Information passes from the radiologist to the treating physicians quickly.  

For a generation of physicians, though, The Wax Pencil Sign was a reliable means of communication. It said, “Look right here for the secret.” It helped us when we needed to discern the critical findings in an x-ray.  

Not long ago, I ran across a long-forgotten wax pencil in a drawer. Few people remember its use and importance. It makes me wonder about all of the Wax Pencil Signs we depend on today that will be obsolete when our current students finish their careers.

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   I came across your blog post about wax pencils and a rush of memories came flooding back to me. I am a third generation radiologist. My grandfather became one in 1953, my father in 1972, and I did in 2000. I experienced the change from films to PACS (Picture Archiving and Communication Systems) during my residency. I fondly remember using my father's wax pencils for school projects and even rolling up the paper shavings that were used to expose the tip and using them for wheels on army vehicles I built out of cardboard. I can still smell the wax! So, thank you for bringing back those memories! Oh and we radiologists refer to those marks as the "positive radiology sign" and you are right, pay attention to them.

- Peter Bream
 
Thanks for you note. The other things I miss in Radiology are the sound of films being slapped up onto a light box and those enormous motorized rotating machines that held dozens of films waiting to be read. The file room clerks were always forces with which to be reckoned, as well.

- Bruce
 
Posted 1:34 PM
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3/5/2013

A Positive Attitude and Cancer Survival

 “God helps those who help themselves.”
-Something that sounds like Truth but fortunately isn’t mentioned in any religious text    

“I’m gonna beat this thing again, Doc! I just know it!”  

Over the course of several years, I helped care for a man with a very rare cancer that recurred over-and-over. With each new tumor, he became more focused on beating the disease and despite the repeated setbacks, he remained eternally positive. He spent hours researching every available experimental treatment. He trekked from center to center for therapy. His determination was inspirational.   Despite the intensity of his effort, he eventually lost his battle and died. His well-attended visitation and funeral were testimonies to his remarkable life, his outgoing personality and the respect everyone had for his determination.  

My super-positive patient told me more than once that his attitude was helpful. “It’s why I’m still alive,” he said. His intensity prompted me to ask: How does attitude affect survival? If a patient tries “hard enough,” can cancer be controlled?  

It’s a difficult issue. It is wonderful being with people who are optimistic. As a physician, patients who are positive in the face of terrible adversity are inspirational. Of course, many patients dealing with cancer are devastated both physically and emotionally. With the tobacco-related cancers for which I care, many of my patients carry an extra burden of guilt.  

Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center Psychiatrist Jimmie Holland, MD works with many patients who carry this burden. She refers to a patient or family’s insistence that he or she maintain a positive attitude at all times as “The Tyranny of Positive Thinking.”  

What does research tell us? A positive attitude in cancer patients does not prolong life. In a study of over 1000 head and neck cancer patients, there was no association between the scores of Emotional Well-Being and cancer survival. (Coyne, Cancer 2007, 110:2568-2575.) Similarly, a study of Canadian women with metastatic breast cancer randomized to receive group psychosocial support did not survive any longer than women who were not in a support group, although they had an improved mood and some experienced less perceived pain (Goodwin, NEJM 2001 345:1719-1726).  

So, is this good news or bad? It depends on your interpretation. From my vantage point, the finding that there is no correlation between attitude and survival serves as a gift for our patients and for us. Allowing people to accept their condition and honestly question their fate, no matter how they handle the challenge, might be enormously helpful for some. They don’t need to fear honest discussions.

“No, you don’t have to be upbeat all the time.”

“Yes, you can talk about your sense of loss.”

“You can’t cause any harm by facing the difficult topics.”

Patients do not risk disaster if they react appropriately to stress.  

Cancer Centers like ours provide resources for patients and families who are dealing with stress, and I commonly suggest people explore the resources in our Quality of Life Center. The goal is not to regain a positive attitude, though. It might be to improve a relationship or understand and manage their lives at a stressful time. The small victories come, not always with cure, but at the moments of healing.

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   Please edit to add the "s" to "he' when referring to the wonderful woman author, Jimmie Holland.

- Liz McMillan
 
Sorry for the oversight. My apologies.

- Bruce
 

Having personnely survived head & neck cancer (base of tongue squamous, stage 4 with bilateral metastisis of lymph nodes) 17 years ago, thanks to the recommended treatment from Sloan-Ketterling of co-combatent chemo and radiation, I have a few thoughts on a positive attitude. To me, it's what helped me stay focused on beating the cancer. It made me feel like I had a chance, which in turn reduced the stress of negative possibilities and the debilitating treatments. A positive attitude gives you the needed push to keep trying anything and everything to beat the disease and keeps you from sitting around going "woe is me", or "why me"!

I looked at it as if it were a journey. Another diversion on the path of life. I didn't have a choice of going down the path (never a smoker or heavy drinker) so I took it as any other diversion, stay positive, focus on what can be done, let your care givers do their best, and pray--alot!

I've always said that the medical community tried their best to kill me (after my second week of 5FU, I understood what the FU stood for), and prayers and a positive attitude saved me.

17 years later, I still believe this! I've been blessed to work as a Professor for the past 15 years, retired from the Air Force Reserves after 35 years and still exercise and play racketball 3 days a week, thanks to the "new" treatment recommended by Sloan-Ketterling in 1996.


- Al Smith

Posted 7:34 AM
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Could a greater miracle take place than for us to look through each other’s eyes for an instant?
-Henry David Thoreau    

It is almost 7:00 a.m. and I carry my briefcase and lunch bag from the car to my office. I nod to some of the night shift employees heading home. Another day has begun.  

I type my password and check the computer, reminding myself of the twenty patients I am scheduled to see today in the cancer clinic. A few new consults with untreated or recurrent cancers occupy the longer appointment slots. Follow-up and post-operative patients will be seen more quickly. It will be a full day but, hopefully, I will grab a few minutes around noon to eat my sandwich.  

I print out some office notes and carry them with me to our weekly 7:15 a.m. Tumor Conference. Several physicians present cases for discussion. We review the scans and the pathology, making recommendations for treatment. We determine who is eligible for a clinical trial. We look at recent research results. Usually, a brief discussion will mean better news for the patient; we have something to offer. A longer discussion can reflect the lack of good options.  

Clinic gets going. First is a 64-year-old man with a tongue cancer. Symptoms have been present for about six months. The scans are helpful. The cancer has not caused much damage. Only one lymph node is involved. Everything else looks fine. I run through the surgical risks, benefits, and alternatives. I prepare the consent form and look at the schedule. Any questions?  

He drops his head, hands gripping his knees. “My wife would have known what to ask,” he tells me. “She died six weeks ago. That’s why I waited to come in. I was caring for her.”  

I pause. There is a story pressing in on us from all sides. It floods the room.  

“I am so sorry,” I reply. “I am glad you are here. Your cancer is still very curable. Tell me about her.”  

We spend some time. I am soon behind on my schedule. There will be more stories that need to be shared before the day is through.  

A recent You-Tube video from the Cleveland Clinic is a spot-on rendering of what happens every day in a hospital. See what you think. No matter where we are, stories surround us, but they are closest to the surface when we are most vulnerable. Recognizing this reality should be part of the repertoire of every physician. We teach this to our students and residents. Even still, how easily we all forget.  

The day in clinic draws to an end and everyone has gone home. At 6:00 p.m., my charts are half-complete. I pick up my briefcase and lunch bag. I find my car and head home.

Tomorrow will be here soon enough.

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   Dr Campbell, Your Reflections are always so moving including this one. The You-Tube Video from the Cleveland Clinic was excellent.

- Mary Ann, an RN
 
 
 
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Bruce Campbell, MD, grew up in the Chicago area, graduating from Purdue University and Rush Medical College. He completed an otolaryngology residency at the Medical College of Wisconsin and a head and neck surgery fellowship at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. He has been on the faculty at Froedtert & the Medical College of Wisconsin since 1987.

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Dr. Bruce Campbell
Bruce Campbell, MD
Medical College of Wisconsin Otolaryngologist
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