Help is on the way
- Share via
Deepa Bharath
Yu Pirush’s voice was pitched like the soft gurgle of the
Kahlua-colored river that flows through his neighborhood in the deep
Amazon.
The Achuar Indian’s caramel skin wrinkled up like leather when he
smiled and his wild black hair with streaks of gray rested
reluctantly on his shoulders as he spoke the language of his tribe.
For two months, Pirush had waited in Macas, a little town on the
edge of Ecuador’s rainforest.
Home, for Pirush, is far, far away -- a 20-day trek through the
thick wilderness or an hour’s journey in a bush plane.
He had waited in Macas for the “North American doctors” to rescue
him.
He wanted to show them the hole in his hand.
When Pirush peeled off the bandage that covered his mangled hand,
the air filled with the stench of his pain. The back of his hand,
missing most of its skin, looked like a cage of bones rent by disease
and infection. It looked like a poster for a horror movie.
Two yellowing bones stuck out, exposing a mushy, decaying wound --
an agony that remains for Pirush after a snake bit him in the jungle
more than five months ago.
His fingers were stiff like cardboard and he held out his hand
almost as if someone had ripped it out and then hastily glued it back
on.
“Just put some flesh on the hole,” he said, repeatedly, in his
native tongue.
Pirush hoped that Huntington Beach plastic surgeon Larry Nichter
and his team of doctors and nurses from Hoag Memorial Hospital
Presbyterian could work their magic on his traumatized hand.
One of many in need
Pirush wasn’t the only one with that hope. When the seven-member
team from the Plasticos Foundation arrived at the hospital in Macas
that afternoon in August, more than 200 people waited in the dimly
lighted corridor.
The team of medical professionals from the Huntington Beach-based
nonprofit -- consisting of one plastic surgeon, one general surgeon,
three nurses and two coordinators -- had traveled for almost a day to
get to Macas. It was a long and arduous journey. But the plane trip
was like a drive to the neighborhood supermarket compared to what
they had to achieve in a week’s time.
They were on a mission to help as many people as they possibly
could, to cure as many helpless people as the laws of science and
medicine would allow. They would have to dig deep into their
collective experience and stretch the boundaries of their knowledge.
They would need to improvise, think quickly and explore untapped
resources.
In anticipation, the team had packed in an entire operation
theater into 14 large red suitcases embroidered with the foundation’s
logo on them. They even brought along a portable anesthesia machine,
just in case.
Team members lugged the heavy bags through domestic and
international airports and waited in lines for hours before reaching
their destination -- the picturesque town nestled in the rambling
folds of the Amazonian rainforest.
As the bus that carried the team screeched to a stop outside --
kicking dust off the streets -- hopeful eyes including Pirush’s
peered out.
The waiting room
They packed the hospital’s 20-foot-by-5-foot corridor. Those who
couldn’t fit flowed out into the halls and outside the doors. They
waited, leaning against flaked and peeling lime-green walls, their
feet planted firmly on the dull, mosaic floor.
Waiting in that line was a boy so badly burned that his face
looked like a melted rubber mask, a man whose fingers were
incapacitated by a jungle machete, a woman whose angry husband had
bitten off a chunk of her nose in a drunken rage and a little girl
who was born with her two middle fingers fused together.
For about seven hours that day, Nichter and Newport Beach general
surgeon Robert Burns screened more than 70 patients. Several had to
be turned away at the door because their problem was not plastic
surgery-related.
“We’re only trying to do surgeries no other surgeons can do here,”
Nichter said. “We’re trying to do surgery on people with functional
problems, not cosmetic problems. We don’t have a whole lot of time.
We need to prioritize.”
For the doctors, the crowd was overwhelming.
“As fast as they come in, they keep filling up the hall,” Burns
said, shaking his head, as he looked at the bulging corridor.
“This is a lot more patients than I see in months in my office
back home,” Nichter said.
The team had less than a week to perform about 50 complex
surgeries, many of which involved several surgical procedures.
“It’s sad that all these people came from far off places,” Nichter
said. “But the truth is we can’t help everyone.”
The pain of rejection
Among those who returned disappointed was Shiki Chumpu, a
48-year-old farmer who walked for three days and then waited five
hours to take a seven-hour bus ride to get to Macas. He came all the
way from Tumbaem, a jungle community of about 33 Shuar Indian
families.
Chumpu couldn’t bend the fingers of his right hand. He depends on
that hand to use the machete, to plow the soil, plant corn and milk
his cow. He said that months ago, a snake about 9 feet long bit him
on the hand when he was climbing a tree looking for construction
wood.
“We won’t be able to help him,” Nichter said after the examination
that lasted about a minute.
The muscles of Chumpu’s arm had died, the surgeon said.
Chumpu mostly spoke Shuar, but he seemed to understand the gist of
what Nichter was saying. He had made a harrowing journey across the
jungle for days only to meet more hopelessness on the other side.
There were others like Chumpu in the dark, damp alcoves of the
jungle, who lacked the means to cross the formidable forest that
surrounds their little bamboo huts.
So Nichter and his team headed out to the jungle. They traveled by
bush plane to two jungle communities -- Tukupi and Morona. Nichter
picked two patients from the Tukupi clinic. The team was ready to
begin its mission.
They had 50 patients and a little over five days to do surgery.
Danilo’s story
When Danilo Ujupma smiled, the gray hospital room with cracked,
dust-covered windows got a little brighter.
It was a full smile, with a wide open mouth that stretched across
his face, making his cheeks pink and his eyes dance.
But just as quickly as the 12-year-old Shuar Indian boy could
produce that 1,000-watt smile he could shut down and go to a dark
place where no one else could go with him.
Danilo was born with a right hand with three of his middle fingers
fused together. He could move his thumb and little finger, but his
three middle fingers looked like a little, fleshy bundle tied up in a
knot.
The boy was waiting his turn for surgery. Danilo’s hope was that
he would have at least two normally functioning fingers in his right
hand after it was all done. Wearing a green hospital gown, he was
fiddling with his black, silky hair that fell down to his shoulders.
He chatted with other children who were waiting with him. But he
always hid his deformed right hand. He would push it inside his gown
or slide it under his thigh so no one could see it.
“Danilo is not happy,” said his mother, tears welling up in her
eyes. “Other kids tell him things that don’t make him feel very good.
I can’t bear to see him like this.”
Danilo’s eyes started to fill up as he listened to his mother
talk. He bent his head way down, pressing his chin to his chest.
“This is very embarrassing for me,” he said softly, without
looking up.
“The kids treat him badly,” his mother says, choking up. “They
talk bad.”
Danilo eats and writes with his left hand. They had taken him to
several doctors in the area, but no one could help him. Danilo and
his mother rode a bus for more than a day to come to Macas from their
hometown of Cochenzo.
“There were no other doctors who could do it,” the mother said.
“We heard the North American doctors were coming. We came as soon as
we could.”
Nurse Jane Collins, who was near the boy, hugged him as he broke
down and cried.
“It’s going to be OK, Danilo,” the recovery room nurse said,
comforting him and gently rubbing his back. “You’re going to be
fine.”
But as Danilo lay on the operating table under anesthesia,
surgeons Nichter and Burns launched into a discussion.
“We can’t do two sides of his finger at the same time,” Burns
said. “The arteries run on either side of the finger. There’s the
risk of both arteries going into spasm and if that happens, the
finger could die.”
So they decided to do “half the surgery,” which meant Danilo would
get two new, functional fingers, instead of three.
“In a few days, the bandages will come off and he’ll have two good
fingers,” Nichter said, smiling. “I wish I could see the look on his
face then.”
As Nichter worked on separating the fingers, Burns did a skin
graft by removing a patch of skin from Danilo’s abdomen and covering
his “new fingers” with the “new skin.”
“The skin has different thickness in different parts of the body,”
Burns explained. “The skin on our abdomen is the same thickness as
the skin on our fingers.”
As Danilo was getting started, 7-year-old Maritza Mayorga was
recovering from her fifth surgery to correct her cleft palate, which
left her with an opening in the roof of the mouth.
Taunted and teased
Maritza had her first surgery when she was an 11-month-old baby.
“Basically, she has an open palate,” Nichter said. “So she can’t
enunciate words or make plosive sounds like ‘puh’ or ‘tuh.’ So her
speech is not clear.
“Hopefully, this will be the last surgery she’ll ever need.”
Maritza’s mother Carmen Wampash hoped so.
“Maritza’s friends tease her,” she said. “Her teacher says she
can’t understand what Maritza’s saying.”
Relatives give her a tough time too.
“They all have their theories about why she was born this way,”
Wampash said. “All I wish is for it to be fixed so her speech
improves.”
Nichter said he closed the gap in the oral and nasal side of her
palate.
“That will also prevent liquids from squirting out her nose when
she drinks something,” he said.
As 2-year-old Kevin Coro lay on the table to get his cleft palate
fixed, Burns was a tad nervous.
“We’re running out of anesthesia,” he said.
On the first day of surgery hospital staff had realized that the
anesthetic they were about to use had expired five years ago.
“They told us they had enough,” Burns said. “But this morning
there was about a quarter of an inch of liquid in that bottle.”
So, the doctors were waiting for someone to go to a nearby town
called Sucua and buy a few bottles.
“Hopefully the machine won’t dry out before they arrive,” Burns
said. After a few anxious moments, one bottle did arrive from Sucua
and the surgeons proceeded with their work.
Call for creativity
The operation room nurses had to innovate almost every day.
“We didn’t have tourniquets for the hand surgeries,” said Virginia
Burns. A tourniquet is a cloth that helps cut off blood circulation
to the hand before surgery to prevent excessive bleeding.
So, Fodor and Burns, came up with a substitute. They cut off a
piece of cloth from the blood pressure monitor and wrapped it up
tightly around the patient’s hand.
“Whatever works, works for us,” Fodor said.
Recovery room nurse Collins’ job was different. She took care of
patients after the surgery. Collins often dealt with patients waking
up from the anesthesia. While children bawled because of the
uncertainty about where there were and what happened to them, adults
were disoriented and often tried to pull out their oxygen tube or get
out of bed.
“It’s quite normal for them to feel that way,” Collins said, as
she held her patients tightly, sitting by their side.
“It’s all right,” she would tell her patients in Spanish, as their
drowsy eyelids fluttered. “Your operation just got over. It’s OK.
You’re going to be fine.”
Collins didn’t have much trouble with Katherine Fajardo, a
2-year-old girl with a double cleft lip, who woke up peacefully after
the surgery. Before she went into surgery, Katherine’s upper lip
looked like a shapeless piece of pinkish-red Jell-O. The girl, who
was abandoned by her mother, was brought in to the hospital and cared
for by a family member.
“This is a very dramatic surgery,” Nichter said.
It involved a three-step process. First, Nichter had to
reconstruct the inside of the lip.
“Then, I reconstruct the muscle so the child is able to do things
like kissing or whistling,” he explained. “The last step is to
reconstruct the outside of the lip.”
Meanwhile, Brigit Aray, who was waiting her turn outside, was
scared.
“Don’t poke me,” she cried, tears streaming down her face.
“Mommy!”
The 7-year-old, who minutes earlier was chatting away with nurses
and darting all around the hospital lawns, hugged her mom tightly as
she sensed something was happening around her.
Most of Brigit’s right thumb was missing from birth. But that
never stopped her from climbing trees, playing soccer, hanging out
with friends, smiling at total strangers -- and just being Brigit.
The language barrier
As she was taken away to the operation room, little Brigit’s cries
got louder.
“Don’t hurt me,” she cried out in Spanish as the nurses made her
lie down on the table. “Don’t poke me.”
“Brigit, we’re not going to hurt you,” nurse Fodor told her in
English.
“Don’t hurt me,” Brigit cried out in Spanish.
“Listen, Brigit,” Fodor said, tenderly, continuing to speak in
English. There were tears in Fodor’s eyes now.
“Oh my God,” Fodor turned away, helpless.
“This is so frustrating,” she said, wiping away tears from under
her surgical mask. “I want to help. I want to tell her she’s going to
be OK. And I want to tell her we’re not going to poke her.
“I hate it when I can’t communicate with the patients.”
But, within seconds, Brigit was asleep. Nichter saw the bone of
her hand was in tact and made a separation between her deformed thumb
and the second finger, creating an illusion of a longer thumb. Burns
carved off some skin from her abdomen to attach to her thumb.
“It’s not just for appearance,” Nichter said. “She can actually
move her thumb and use her hand better.”
Burns and Nichter also operated on patients with tumors and burn
scars. Nichter’s longest surgery lasted about four hours when he
worked on a man with a machete injury that had left him without being
able to bend three fingers in his right hand.
“God gave us 85% of us an extra tendon in each of our arms and
legs just so we can perform this surgery,” Nichter joked.
What he was about to do was remove one tendon from the man’s arm,
cut it to three pieces and use each piece in each of the invalid
fingers so he could bend them again.
“We need only one of those two tendons for normal function, which
is what makes this surgery possible,” Nichter explained.
When it was all done the doctors and nurses had worked on 47
patients on whom they had performed 74 surgical procedures over five
days. Each day of surgery was 12 to 16 hours long and each day began
and ended with the doctors’ rounds when they visited their patients
to monitor their recovery and give instructions to hospital staff
about their diet, care or discharge from the hospital.
When the team visited Danilo, who was recovering from his hand
surgery, he was quiet, but seemed relaxed.
“I can’t feel anything inside the bandage,” he said, trying to
look inside.
“Keep his hand up,” Nichter instructed Danilo’s mother.
“You have two new fingers now,” Nichter told him through a
translator.
Danilo smiled.
Mission accomplished
Like a toddler with a mischievous grin on his face, thoughts of
home played “peekaboo” with team members.
Their walk had gotten a little slower. There was talk of going
back home. About seeing “the kids.” The nurses were talking about
their schedules and shifts at Hoag Hospital.
The excitement had, sort of, died down.
They began to dismantle equipment and pack up supplies. The team
was going to donate about $40,000 worth of goods to the hospital.
That included a boom box with a compact disc player that Burns had
bought at an electronics store in Downtown Macas.
“You need to make work more fun,” surgeon Burns told the smiling
Ecuadorian doctors.
They also donated anesthetics sufficient for about 100 surgeries,
intravenous fluids, dressings, staples, sutures and a set of
laparoscopic instruments.
As team members presented these items to hospital staff, Nichter
told them that Macas was very much in Plasticos’ future.
“This is our second step in a long journey of what we’d like to
accomplish,” he said.
Nichter talked about his vision of having a “much more expanded
operation,” teaming up with local plastic surgeons in Ecuador “who
will converge in Macas.”
“We want to help the indigenous people,” Nichter said. “Especially
those who can’t afford medical treatment.”
He thanked the hospital staff for their cooperation and for
teaming up with Plasticos.
“These are memories we’ll keep an entire lifetime,” he said.
A sad farewell
It was bittersweet for team members.
“I’m ready to go,” Fodor said. “But it feels sad at the same
time.”
Ruth Ann Burns was looking forward to go home and scoop her
15-month-old granddaughter into her arms.
“But I feel horrible leaving all these people behind,” she said.
“It feels like they’re part of our families too.”
Recovery room nurse Collins was tearful as she hugged Alba
Sarmiento, a nurse at the hospital in Macas.
“We exchanged e-mail addresses and mailing addresses,” Collins
said, wiping away tears.
“Oh, Alba, I’m gonna miss you,” she said, hugging her friend
again.
Collins gave her jungle boots to Sarmiento, who lives by the river
in the outskirts of the town, with her husband and daughters.
“She needs it more than I do,” Collins said.
The 14 red suitcases that traveled with the team were all packed,
weighed and piled in the back of two trucks.
“This is not the end,” Nichter told his team and hospital
officials. “It’s only our second step in a long, long journey.”
Seven-year-old Brigit Aray had her hand still bandaged, but she
had her smile back. Nichter had operated on her thumb.
“Are they leaving, daddy?” the little girl asked her father
Orlando Chica.
“Yes, they have to go a long way,” he replied.
“Will they be back?” Brigit asked, seemingly anxious.
“Yes, my daughter,” he said, hugging her as she giggled.
“They will come back.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.