Showing posts with label dvt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dvt. Show all posts

24 May 2021

On Being an Odonto-Medical Wonder

Stephen Alexander:  
The Colour of Pain (2021)
 
 
I. 
 
The first post published on Torpedo the Ark was entitled Reflections on the Loss of UR6; a poem in which I considered the violent act of tooth extraction and the subsequent sense of trauma as your tongue probes the empty space where once a molar had been. 
 
What the post didn't mention, however, was that the verse was based on an actual incident. Nor does it inform readers that the tooth extracted - UR6 - possessed such an unusually deep and powerful root that my dentist had real problems removing it (much to her professional embarrassment). 
 
Indeed, the root was of such an unusual length and size that it and the tooth were featured in a dental journal.
 
 
II. 
 
I was reminded of this latter fact recently whilst sitting having my lower right leg photographed and filmed with professional equipment in the Emergency Department at Queen's Hospital, for possible use in a medical journal and/or as teaching material for medical students. 
 
Not that there's anything particularly interesting or aesthetically pleasing about my leg as a limb in itself. But the swelling, deep bruising, and inflammation, is, apparently, of a highly unusual and perplexing nature; it could be superficial thrombophlebitis; it might simply be an infection of some kind or a ruptured vein; or it may betray a DVT - even though the position is all wrong. 
 
(No one wanted to mention the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine, though this remained an unspoken subtext.)
 
Whatever the cause, I signed a consent form agreeing that images of the discoloured leg could be used in a case study and I find that my discomfort is lessened by the knowledge that my unidentified limb - just like my anonymous tooth - serves the cause of medical science in some small way. 
 
Now pass those pre-filled syringes so I can inject an anticoagulant into my stomach ...