Monday, August 18, 2014

August 8 - 12

            It has been some time since I last wrote. Partly because we were so busy, partly because there was no Internet connection. It was a busy four days in Kangundo. We saw over 780 patients in 2&1/2 days, but let me start with the setting. Kangundo is a rural community, about 4 hours east of Nairobi. The only electricity is from a power generator that they run at night for about 3 hours. The food is prepared over a gas stove and our cooks did an amazing job. Miriam’s parents had built an extension on their home that could accommodate the team, so it turns into a college dorm situation.  The evenings would cool a little, with the terraced hills acting as a backdrop. This is really Africa. The jog in the evenings was amazing. Soon joined by a group of 10 or so young boys keeping pace in worn down sandals. Bad for the ego, but a lot of fun otherwise. Their hospitality was also fantastic. Imagine opening up your home to a bunch of foreigners, bit that is exactly what Monica and Isaac do every year.
            The clinical cases that we see are also remarkable. There are a number of people with blood pressures over 220 / 140, yet they don’t see the number of strokes that we would see in our population. There must be some genetic component, both to drive the pressures up, but also to provide some protection. I will have to read on pseudo-hypertension as to one answer. Diabetes is in a similar vein, however. We saw a number of prople over 400 blood sugars, some over 800. No signs of diabetic ketoacidosis either.
            There are a number of cases that stand out. The first was a woman in her 90’s who presented with a massive thyroid goiter. It was so large it cut off her esophagus and she couldn’t eat at this time. It was starting to affect her breathing as well. She had already been to the national hospital, and they had advised her that she was too old to operate on. I could only offer her thyroid replacement, as well as an Albuterol inhaler to minimize any airway spastic disease that was affecting her breathing. She will probably not live too long, something thst she and her grandson tok with grace. The other memorable thing was that she had collapsed while walking to the clinic. Her grandson came to her aid when he found out about that.
            We really are missing our surgical colleagues. Basma, my medical student, found a woman with a pelvic mass right up to her lower liver margin. It was freely mobile and not rock hard, so I suspect either a large uterine fibroid or a benign tumor of the ovary called a serouscystadenoma.
            Another case was a 9 year old boy severely affected by cerebral palsy. He had poor head control, it sort of flopped to the lowest point depending on how his mother was holding him. He had early contractures on the left side, prominently affecting the hand and aknkle. His right side was more flaccid. Not much to offer other than teaching mom some exercises to minimize the hand contractures.
            My final case (there are many more) was a 22 year old woman that was suffering from a severe post-partum depression. She is currently living with her aunt, who initially did all the talking. Finally the young woman opened up herself, and we were able to make some head-way. She had developed severe symptoms at about 2 months of the child’s age. Often in rage, other times totally withdrawn. She was having what sounded like some psychotic symptoms as well with at least delusions, if not paranoid ideation. I never did determine if she had been sexually abuse and this child was the product of that abuse, but I suspect that is the case. There are no resources available for her, however we could have gotten some help in the village for at least other women in the church could have come alongside her.
            The thing I want to leave you with is a idea of the Kangundo hospital. We visited one morning, particularly the maternity unit. There are 6 bed wards, with women taken back to a small room for delivery. In that room are 3 delivery beds that the US donated in the 1950’s. They don’t breakdown, hence the deliveries are a challenge. They have a small warmer, that doesn’t quite function. They have to have a side space heater to keep the infant warm. The suction devices are foot pedal operated, which may be a good thi since the electricity is not always running. I didn’t see the other delivery equipment, but was told they do a lot of vacuum extractions. (This is where a large suction cup is placed on the infant’s head and they assist the delivery). They also deliver breech presentation (where the feet or buttocks presents first, rather than the head). They have close to 300 deliveries per month. They average about 3 stillbirths, 2 prolonged stillbirths, 1 maternal and 2 to 3 fetal deaths per month. They clearly need some help. They were desperate for fetal monitors, better delivery beds, some infant resuscitation equipment, as well as antibiotics. (I left our Ceftriaxone, Amoxicillin, and Septra with them).
            The NICU (neonatal intensive care unit), consisted of two small rooms with two premature babies in isolette warmers in the first room, and four babies in the second. Two of the babies had bilirubin metabolism disorders and were in light therapy. The other two babies, one had a birth trauma and was recovering (though cerebral palsy is probably in his future), and the other was a normal newborn whose mother had died giving birth.
            I am considering forming a group called Friends of Kangundo. The idea would be to raise some support for both minimal treatment of totally out of control blood pressure, diabetes, and some symptomatic relief (eye drops – liquid tears) on the out-patient side, while connecting difficult to control patients to the hospital outpatient services (they run blood pressure and diabetic clinics on a regular basis), as well as seeing what we can generate in terms of support for the local hospital.
            Sorry for the long read, but that is the news from Kangundo.

Patients waiting outside the clinic - old church outbuilding

Basma at work

Karen at work

Community Greeting - not everyone sings when you come over

Procession in the field to the new clinic site

Hospital grounds - Kangundo Hospital

6 bed wards all pretty much open

Infant resuscitation table with side warmer - the overhead warmer does not work

Their best delivery bed













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