Yeah, she was really sceptical of the open heart surgery was'nt she!!! As Rolfe so rightly pointed out at the start of this thread, it is impossible to open the chest cavity whilst the patient is concious. IMPOSSIBLE!!!
Kathy Sykes just lapped this up, if she was half the scientist she claims she would imediatly see why this operation was a fake. And this woman is supposed to be a professor of public engagment in science!! pah!
I have to say that it appeared to me that they were opening that girls torso just below the liver in a horizontal incision - isn't heart surgery usually performed with a vertical section - hence the 'zipper club'?
This is the confusing thing. When we saw the open heart stuff, I'm sure I could see the heart pumping away like a good 'un. Now if it was heart was being worked on, don't they have to stop it and put her on a machine?
And then when she skipped out the hospital a few days later, she had a whopping great scar down her chest - the zipper club you mention?
I've been trying to figure this out from what I saw, and I can't really see that it was anything other than some sort of trick.
I wish I'd videoed it, but I didn't so there you go. As we saw the scalpel cut I did get the impression that the incision was being made laterally, but that could have been an illusion created by the drapes, I can't be sure. Certainly the operation site showed a midline thoracotomy with the sternum bisected, and when the girl left the hospital she did have an extremely ugly vertical midline chest incision.
The shots of the surgery clearly showed the intact heart beating away good-style, in an open chest. There was no mention of how the patient was being ventilated, and she was clearly not intubated. I saw some tubes that looked as if they might be for gas transport, but I couldn't see in what way they were connected to the patient. Someone in an earlier post mentioned a heart-lung bypass, something I have to say I know little about, as it's not a procedure performed in veterinary medicine. It seems reasonable that a heart-lung machine may be part of the solution to this mystery, but I can't really see how it solves it.
I would have thought they would have had to stop the heart in order to do the surgery described, but perhaps they did and we just didn't see that part. However, if there was a heart-lung machine, how was it connected?
The shots of the patient leaving the hospital showed an incision which seemed to go no higher than the thoracic inlet. There was no sign of any incision in the throat area, so apparently no tracheotomy at that level. I was wondering if the trachea was accessed directly within the thorax, and it may be that was what was done. Perhaps (ignorance showing, sorry) that's standard when a heart-lung bypass is in place. Nevertheless, how would you get the patient to that stage?
Normally, you would induce general anaesthesia and enough muscle relaxation to let you do what you pleased, and intubate the patient. Anaesthesia would be stabilised and the patieht ventilated
before going into the chest cavity. The chest would then be opened, and the surgeon would have time to sort out and position whatever fancy equipment was needed. Perhaps at this stage a direct air line into the trachea at a point within the chest is feasible, perhaps even routine, I don't know. But what I do know is that getting to that stage would inevitably require intubation and ventilation, I just can't see how it would be possible otherwise without severely endangering the patient's life.
This could have been a total fake with the connivance of the television crew - in that case we could have been seeing bits of a number of different operations all cut together to give the desired impression. However, I wouldn't have suspected a BBC crew of such duplicity, and it seems more likely that the crew itself was deceived. I suspect there must have been a period of the process where they were excluded from the theatre. Either the girl was fully anaesthetised and intubated while the chest was opened and the heart-lung apparatus set up, then allowed to surface a bit and de-intubated after that, or there was a mad scramble to get a heart-lung bypass in place in a spontaneously breathing patient before she asphyxiated. Both of these possibilities sound dangerous to the point of madness to me.
It might also explain why the actual incision we saw being made looked as if it was in a different site entirely - being excluded from the theatre at that point, they just cut in a bit of stock footage?
Maybe there's another more reasonable explanation that I'm missing here, and hey, do we have anyone with any experience in human anaesthesia who could comment further? However, this is really quite obsessing me, because I feel we have been shown a conjuring trick and invited to believe there really is a bisected lady in the box under the drapes.
Other questions that spring to mind are, how come this is a safer procedure? Modern general anaesthesia is not high-risk, and I know how I'd prefer a patient who had its chest open and a lot of complicated tubing attached - unconscious! Just imagine if she had surfaced enough to panic! And how come the recovery was so fast? It's not the anaesthesia that's going to hold you back after a procedure like that, it's the fact that you've had your breastbone sawn open. And yet she was seen leaving the hospital apparently very soon afterwards. Hey, is it possible that her breastbone
wasn't sawn open? (Back to the possibility of some very devious trickery.) And how come it was so much cheaper? Given all the paraphenalia and the extent of the surgery, I wouldn't have thought that the cost of a general anaesthetic would have added nearly as much to the price (proportionately speaking) as they claimed. Didn't they say the cost was halved? This is just ridiculous.
And note, this really has nothing at all to do with the acupuncture. Whatever was done to that girl, prestidgitation aside, could have been accomplished with deep sedation and local anaesthesia, which were admittedly used. What was the acupuncture supposed to be doing again?
I think it's an insult to the intelligence to be left with doubts and questions of that nature after what was supposed to be a scientific investigation, and frankly I'm disgusted.
Rolfe.