Anand Brahmandam

218 posts

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Anand Brahmandam

Anand Brahmandam

@andybrahm

Vascular Surgeon @NMsurgery @NMCardioVasc via @YaleVascular | All actions my own | RT/L ≠ E

Chicago, IL Katılım Ocak 2012
1.4K Takip Edilen661 Takipçiler
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Maggie Reilly
Maggie Reilly@MaggieReillyMD·
Stop by the Northwestern table at the VAM Residency Fair for some swag and the best team ever! @VascularSVS @FutureVascSurgn
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Britt H. Tonnessen
Britt H. Tonnessen@Dr_Tonnessen·
Well I have pulled some notorious April 1 tricks. My favorite was 20 years ago to get a co-resident to come see an “emergent thoracotomy” in the ER. He would talk his way out of any consult. Came running in. I was crying laughing.
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Society for Vascular Surgery
Society for Vascular Surgery@VascularSVS·
To honor the legacy of the late Dr. James S.T. Yao, MD, PhD, the Yao family and the Society for Vascular Surgery Foundation introduce the James S.T. Yao Resident Research Award, formerly known as the Resident Research Award. ow.ly/mqtl50Q33Ck
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Max Wohlauer, MD
Max Wohlauer, MD@doctormaxw·
Thank you to the 41 participating Vascular Residency Programs📝 Medical Students don’t miss out! Sign up now 🎟️ tinyurl.com/2rbu5aza
VESurgery@VESurgery

The 4th Annual @VESurgery Virtual Residency Fair will be held on TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 6:00pm CST. Last year's event featured 40 programs with 138 applicants! We look forward to a similar level of participation and engagement this year! Sign up today! tinyurl.com/2rbu5aza

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VESurgery
VESurgery@VESurgery·
The 4th Annual @VESurgery Virtual Residency Fair will be held on TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 6:00pm CST. Last year's event featured 40 programs with 138 applicants! We look forward to a similar level of participation and engagement this year! Sign up today! tinyurl.com/2rbu5aza
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Britt H. Tonnessen
Britt H. Tonnessen@Dr_Tonnessen·
Left to right Paola Batarseh PGY 2 Sarah Loh PGY 4, Me PGY 24, Alex Neifert PGY 3, David Strosberg Great morning at the VA @YaleVascular
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Adam W. Beck
Adam W. Beck@AWBeckMD·
Excellent and timely article @katie_thomas, @anniewaldman, @andrewfordnews and @ikeswetlizt, thank you. If I were a patient with #PAD, this would scare the hell out of me, and probably should. A few important takeaways from this if you're a patient: -Doctors do get paid for procedures, so they are inherently conflicted in some ways. -In some settings, doctors can make tremendous amounts of money doing certain procedures, and this can be intoxicating and lead to overtreatment and nefarious business practices -Despite this, most doctors want to help you. But you should advocate for yourself and always consider a second opinion when you are offered a procedure. -All #PAD does not need a procedure! -Patients with claudication (pain in the legs when walking due to poor blood flow) most often don't need a procedure. -If you are a claudicant, you are very unlikely to lose your leg. And plaques/atherosclerosis/hardening of the arteries/peripheral arterial disease/peripheral vascular disease (all terms to describe the same thing) in your legs do not cause strokes or heart attacks (but are a marker of you being high risk for those problems) -If a doctor tells you that they think you should NOT have a procedure, listen! They are a good doctor. -If you can quit smoking(!!!), get on a statin medication (if you are able...even if your cholesterol isn't high), take an antiplatelet medication like aspirin, and walk, walk, and WALK some more, you will lower your risk of amputation and will improve your symptoms without a procedure -Nothing can MAKE you quit smoking, but your doctor can help you. -Sometimes atherosclerosis can be severe and become what is called Chronic Limb Threatening Ischemia (CLTI for short), manifested as pain at rest or leg wounds due to very poor blood flow, and this may require a procedure to save your leg. -Sometimes this can be done with wires, catheters, balloons and even atherectomy (little data, long story). Sometimes surgery ("bypass") is better! This is a complicated decision process and depends on the severity of ischemia, the extent of your blockages, and your overall health -Not all legs can be saved unfortunately, and sometimes amputation is the only treatment option. Your doctor can help you get through this, rehabilitate and it is possible to walk again afterwards. -Make sure to ask your doctor if they participate in quality registries such as the Society for Vascular Surgery Vascular Quality Initiative (SVS VQI) and the National Cardiovascular Data Registry (NCDR). Doctors that follow their outcomes are simply better doctors. @CaitlinWHicks @nichosbo @VascularSVS @ACCinTouch
Katie Thomas@katie_thomas

Meet Kelly Hanna. Over 18 months, a doctor who calls himself "the leg saver" performed 18 artery-opening procedures in what she believed was an effort to prevent amputation. In July 2020, after her foot turned cold, she lost her leg. nytimes.com/2023/07/15/hea…

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Britt H. Tonnessen
Britt H. Tonnessen@Dr_Tonnessen·
If you don’t grab your shoes first from the bin after coming through airport security, I don’t think we can be friends.
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