View allAll Photos Tagged Surgery

The surgery itself went well, but I caught double-pneumonia COVID while there 4 days later, and had to be taken in an ambulance to a special covid unit for 14 days, then to a rehab facility for 16 days after that to build up some strength and breathing... It was pretty bad. I'm finally home, but still have a long way to go - but am much better than I was.

this is one of the endles tunnels in the lost sugery of the Beelitz Heilstätten, the size of this building is just amazing, in the whole complex there was room for over 1000 people included the medical personal

A friend of mine performing major iPod surgery.

Peace and mercy of Allah and his blessing

A very modest idea

Medical errors, especially in minimally invasive surgery

We have heard and some of us have passed by or known to one

Especially in the cosmetic surgery we hear about more

The most important reasons that occur because of medical errors after God's will

Certificates are illegal or incompetent to give adequate

Or use the wrong tools and wrong way

You have heard it may not

But there has already occurred to some God enough and you are evil

Solutions to minimize them and executed, God willing

www.dr-ksa.com/vb/showthread.php?t=26092&page=1

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السلام عليكم ورحمة الله وبركته

صورة متواضعه جدا فكرتها

الأخطاء الطبيه وخصوصا في الجراحات

سمعنا عنها وبعضا منا قد مر بها او احد يعرفه

وخصوصا في الجراحات التجميلية نسمع عنها اكثر

اهم الأسباب التي تحدث بسببها الأخطاء الطبية بعد مشيئة الله

هي الشهادات الغير مشروعه او اعطائها لعديمي الكفاءة الكافية

او استخدام الأدوات الخاطئة والطريقة الخاطئة

قد سمعتم عنها وقد لا

ولكنها موجودة وقد حدثت بالفعل للبعض كفانا الله واياكم شرها

حلول لتقليل منها واعدامها بأذن الله

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eyesweb1.deviantart.com/gallery/27816432#/d35hk9h

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هشومي حبيبي والله انو تعب معايا وكول مرة يتعب معايا

واتبهذل وبرضو ماكان ضامني بالصورة من كتر التجارب اللي اسويها فيه ككككك

ياحبيبي ياهشوم :$

"I have no medical evidence to back me up, but something happened during the operation that staved off that infection. Something beyond science. Something perhaps from above..."

 

-The Doctor, Seinfeld

 

Happy Earth Day!!

Bedminster, Bristol, UK

4.23

Theme: Disable

 

I had surgery on my ACL two months ago. Stuck in my mother's basement for two weeks. Experiencing life without the ability to be mobile was terrible. There were limitations on my ability to do basic things, such as using the washroom. The first couple days after my surgery, I could not sit down on the toilet.

 

Something you barely think about every day was causing me insane pain. I was struggling with things I usually encounter on a normal day and never think about on a regular basis . My experience has brought to my attention the struggles people with disabilities have every day. I learned from my short experience that society is not designed to accommodate people with physical impairments.

 

During my rehabilitation, I had to go to my university campus. Around campus, you can see automatic door openers everywhere. When I needed to use those automatic door opener, I realized the poorly designed locations for those buttons. For a few weeks, I experienced life without my legs properly functioning, and it was mentally exhausting to cope with my limitations.

 

After this experience, I want to advocate for people with physical disabilities rights to have built to accommodated their needs. I could start by complaining to my university about the poorly designed buttons. I acknowledge I cannot change every building, but at least I can do something.

  

As for this image. It was photographed a month after my surgery. I just started to be able to walk with a limp. I was going to take a picture with my boyfriend which was going to be inspired by the movie Signs. But it ended up looking like a cheesy family picture. This image is an outtake. Something I did not planned on making. I don't really like this picture but it's a stamp of my experience.

 

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I just had surgery, so I didn't do a lot to prepare for the eclipse. I recently sold my D700 and sigma 70-200 to fund the purchase of the D610, so the longest lens I had was my sigma 105 2.8 macro. I used that on the d610, this one and the "ring of fire" shot were both hand held, without any filters. I did have to do some heavy cropping due to the 105mm focal range, but of the few I took, I got some I am happy with. I only did some minor tweaks in ACR (of the few I made adjustments to). I don't really plan on printing any large format prints, so these will serve well for the family memory books.

The Doc's room at RAF Twinwood.

Documenting my maker tendencies #6. I have been repairing cameras for about a year now. I have worked on many different models from the 1920's to the 1980's. My favorites are the manual cameras from the 1950's. So beautiful inside! This K1000 was the first single lens reflex that I completely disassembled. Of course, it's not back together, yet. But now the shutter works!

 

Minolta X-700 with Rokkor-X 50mm f/1.7 lens

Kentmere Pan 100 film developed in Kodak HC-110, dilution B

Oakland, California

 

Hobi is a male Siberian Husky who is almost 8 years old. Last Friday, he had surgery to remove a large cyst on his tail that was becoming infected. He's healing well, but he's been on pain meds (which have caused some unpleasant diarrhea), and of course he hates that cone! You might think Hobi is angry in this photo, but in fact he was curiously watching me brace myself awkwardly against the kitchen cabinets for this low shutter speed shot (no tripod handy).

Beelitz-Heilstätten

Explore Apr 20, 2010 #144

♫♫ 28 Days Later

Puedes verla mas grande en mi nueva web

Better in large on my new website

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved

 

Tree surgery in Pitlochry this AM (11th December...)

Smashed. Graffiti. Standard

Shhhh

I'm performing surgery

Close your mouth, close your eyes

He has a ticking part

That may pop out

And cause someone surprise

 

Don't worry

There won't be much blood

It will be quick, he'll never know

That his ticking part

His missing part

Is something that has to go

Locals would gather at the surgeons house every time a patient was brought in... the bloodier the better! Carriage accidents and wild beast attacks were the crowd favourites as loss of limb was almost guaranteed!

 

A good time was had by all, except the patient... who mostly had a horrible time.

At Cliffsend, Pegwell Bay, Kent.....

Abandoned hospital somewhere in Italy

thanks to my skilled surgeon

Fed up with dirty hospitals.

Fed up with very very very long waiting lists.

Fed up with being stuck in accident and emergency for hours and hours.

Well no more thanks to DIY surgery for dummies :)

With amazing information and a free Stanley knife and doctors badge, do your surgery at home and beat those unbearable waiting times whilst the doctors stand around and chat.

You too with the help of a minor can perform amazing operations in the comfort of your own home just by following the step by step procedures.

No chloroform no worries just keep hitting the patient on the head with this book until they are unconscious and hack away.

Fun for the whole family.

Once you have finished volume one don't forget to buy volume two next month which tells you how to put your patients/parents organs back in.

 

Well here we go again, all I said to my daughter was I had a headache and look where it gets me.

She is so creative and the mind of a genius and all thanks to this wonderful book.

Now I only have to lay here until next month and she can put me back together, hoorah, still less waiting time than the NHS :)

 

DISCLAIMER! DO NOT TRY THIS YOURSELVES UNLESS YOU HAVE DONE 30 YEARS IN MED SCHOOL OR HAVE BOUGHT THIS BOOK FROM ALL GOOD BOOKSTORES.

THIS PICTURE HAS NO RESEMBLANCE TO ANYONE IN REAL LIFE APART FROM MYSELF AND MY DAUGHTER, SHE IS THE ONE WITH THE JUNIOR JUNIOR DOCTORS BADGE.

 

I have had this shot in mind for quite a while now and finally got round to it.

All the hospital equipment was bought from my local ASDA store which included.

►Pillows and Bedsheets

►sausages, mince, tomato ketchup and tomato puree

The doctors top was the spare one from my chef shots.

The surgical gloves and face mask where from EBAY.

The Stanley knife from my toolbox.

The book from my book collection.

The patients cap is actually the flash diffuser for my beauty dish.

 

This shot was setup in my kitchen with me lying on our dining table with white background paper on my background stand.

The main light was my Elemental 600 to camera left set to 1/4 power and with a beauty dish.

To light the backdrop I used my other Elemental 600 set to 1/2 power and my Nikon SB600 also set to 1/2 power and 50mm.

The kitchen window was to camera right which acted as a fill and also I used a silver reflector to camera left to bounce some of that natural light back into my face.

The flashes where fired off camera using my Yongnuo RF-602 trigger + receivers.

 

Taken With

►Nikon D300s

►Nikon 16-85@38mm

►Tripod + Cable Release

►Elemental M Series Ultra Pro Studio 600

►Nikon SB600 flash

►Yongnuo RF-602 trigger + recievers

 

Thankyou for looking and don't forget to press 'L' on your keyboard for your ultimate surgical experience.

next difficult surgery.......

New edit of unpublished HDR shot of one of the surgeries at Beelitz. Sadly vandalized and with lots of graffiti.

 

History of the place: Beelitz-Heilstätten west of Berlin, is an amazing complex of 60 abandoned and derelict hospital buildings. The oldest buildings are from 1898 drawn by architect Heino Schmieden.

 

The complex became a war hospital during WW1. In 1916 Adolf Hitler was recovering here after being shot in the leg in the Battle of the Somme.

 

After WW2 the hospital was occupied by Soviet forces. They left in 1995.

 

Some more documentary shots on my blog: Beelitz-Heilstätten

 

My blog ||twitter || youtube || vimeo

 

If you are inspired to do urban exploration after seeing my pictures, do so at your own risk. It can be dangerous and illegal and I'm not responsible for your decisions and actions. Don't steal things, break in or vandalize places.

I was born with Supraventricular Tachycardia and have endured two ablations in the last two years.

[The window to...] An Operation Room in an abandoned hospital.

Inspiration struck this afternoon for the visual pun assignment for CWD. Here it is. I'm WAY too proud of myself.

 

"Plastic Surgery" staring me, my favorite bot-hacking knife, and a very upset Optimus Prime.

 

This is also my first shot for 52 weeks. See, Jams? I toldya I'd do it too!

 

Has reached #19 in explore so far. Thanks for all the comments and favs.

Nikon F2 Micro-Nikkor Ais 55/2.8

Kentmere400@320ISO

Xtol 1+3dill. 18min. 20C

Caspers Wilderness Park

 

Seen along the "Oak Trail" A parasitic fungus had attached itself to a portion of the healed cut.

 

This might make an interesting texture for other photos. Hmmm.

Had three oil ducts removed that were chronically inflamed on my lower eyelid.

A close up of the scar. Learn more at scoligirl.com.

Former military hospital in a Soviet barracks

East Germany

2016, March

Today I had cataract surgery on my right eye, and in two or three weeks I will have it on my other eye. My vision felt like it was connected to a dimmer switch and it was slowly becoming grayed out. It was becoming difficult to drive, especially at night, and I needed to do something about it.

 

The surgery itself only took about 20 minutes to a half an hour. I was completely awake for the whole thing, having decided not to take the meds to calm you down beforehand because they would take hours to wear off. It was uncomfortable in that there was a really bright light shining in my eye and if it would've gone on much longer I would've asked the anesthesiologist for the pain meds. But truth be told, I have a very hard time with pain medication and it is often worse for me than the procedure itself. I can stay drugged out for a long time and if there are any other side effects I will get them bigtime.

 

For those of you who don't know, they use some kind of a ultrasound to break up the cataract and then make a small incision in the eye and insert a lens in your eye. I had local anesthesia in my eye and only felt a tiny bit of pressure when this happened.

 

When I had first decided to do the surgery, I was asked if I would like to have my vision remain the same, using my glasses to correct my nearsightedness, or would I like to have that corrected, but then I would be farsighted. I opted to have my vision changed so that I could see far away. So today is the first time in my life that I can see far away without glasses, at least out of my right eye, and I just feel so happy!

 

It's going to be kind of weird for a couple of weeks because I have a different vision in my right eye than in my left eye and my brain needs to figure out how to get my eyes to work together. Right now, I feel off-balance when I walk and I don't have the same depth perception. But my surgeon told me that if I can just get through the next few weeks, then after the second surgery my vision will match up. I feel really good about myself today in that I did something very brave. I am always afraid of surgery, even when other people tell me that it was nothing.

 

I'm kind of bored tonight because there's really not much I can do. I can lay here with my cell phone and write like this, and take a picture or two. It's hard just being so still when you're used to doing things, even simple things. I will wear this patch until tomorrow afternoon when I see my surgeon, and then if all goes well I only have to wear it at night for a week when I sleep.

 

XXOO

 

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