Friday, October 30, 2009

Quotes from Urology Lectures

First, I wonder what urologists tell people they do at parties. It seems like one of those areas of employment where, despite the fact that it took over twenty years of schooling to attain, you might be tempted to...well, not embellish the truth. Not embroider it, certainly...but, perhaps, omit. "I'm a doctor," you'd say, or a surgeon. I'm in men's health, maybe. Because otherwise there will be jokes, almost certainly of questionable quality, and the teller will probably think he's the first one ever to think of something so hilarious, and you'll get thrown out of the party when you finally succumb to temptation and punch him in his damn mouth. That said, some quotes from our urology lectures.

"It's very important to find out what kind of sexual dysfunction a man's experiencing before you just send him home with Viagra. Because if the problem is anorgasmia, and he's been taking 30 minutes to get things done, and you give him a vasodilator-- well, not only will you not solve his problem, but when he's now going 60 or 70 minutes, his wife is going to come looking for you. Probably with a gun."

"The commonest problem in young men is actually not ED--it's...(pause for answers, all of which--interestingly enough--were provided by the women of the class) premature ejaculation, that's right. And you're going to have to ask about it, because I can guarantee you, no one ever comes into the office and says, 'Can you help me, doc? I'm a premature ejaculator.'"

"Men will tell you that they use recreational drugs to treat their ED. Listen, guys: Pot and coke don't make it easier to maintain an erection or anything like that. You just don't remember the erections you aren't having."

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Things I learned this week, and some quotes

1. "In a differential diagnosis, include the 'mosts.' The most common, the most dangerous, and the most interesting. Though in the case of acute chest pain, skip the most interesting. Because if someone has ST elevation on their EKG and you're talking to the resident about parasitic pericarditis, they're going to hit you with the clipboard. And so they should."

2. "Speaking as an internist, every last one of you in this room has a pulmonary embolism until proven otherwise. That is something you never ever want to miss."

3. Apparently there is an outlet for my hypochondria and tendency to catastrophize: unleash it on my patients! "Put in the differential the absolute worst things it could be...the really bad shit. Because you'd feel really bad if the patient died and you had to say, 'Oh, a pneumothorax...I never thought of that!'"

4. 'If a little is good, a lot is better' does not apply to high-fiber cereal bars, no matter how tasty they may be. Remember that SNL spoof about 'Colon Blow' cereal? Back when SNL was funny? Yeah.

5. Physicians, especially ER docs, really seem to relish catching malingerers. Their eyes always light up when they talk about it, and they start grinning like feral chipmunks. For instance, someone complaining of chest pain angling for MI-type attention who says it hurts when you press *right there* is probably faking it. That's musculoskeletal. "I always tell them, oh, good, I think you're out of the woods. Peace."

6. Having whacked out hormone levels (though not, as of yet, any confirmed $%&# diagnosis) has made me a little...hairier than usual. Supposedly acne is also part of the sideshow. "At least I don't have that," I consoled myself. Wrong. Long workouts + androgens + ubiquitous bacteria = not just acne but, cruelly, ass-ne. *Is there no end to the ignominy?!?!*

7. My first hospital session (with an actual patient) is next week. I'm a little (ok, a lot) nervous. Hopefully I will not blind the patient with the ophthalmoscope or forget part of the physical or lose my train of thought during the history and just sit there staring blankly. No. All will be well.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Does she or doesn't she?

Only her reproductive endocrinologist knows for sure.

The 'so, do I have PCOS?' circus continues. Altered hormone levels, especially high androgens (male hormones)? Check. Irregular periods? Check. Increased (ahem) body hair? Yeah, fine, check. Obesity? Well...no, but the comorbid eating disorder could have something to do with that. So what's the most distressing? Honestly, the hair (this from someone who hasn't shaved since middle school). I feel like I'm either going through puberty again or turning into a wolf. Or possibly both. Wasn't there a book during the eighties called 'I was a teenage werewolf?' I think there was.

Americans have really...effed up responses to female body hair. When I wear shorts, I catch people staring. A lot. I wish, if they were really that curious, that they'd have the testicular fortitude (ie balls) to come up to me and say, "Hey, I think your particular style of bodily presentation is really different and kind of cool. Would you tell me a little bit about why you do things this way?" Then I might not want to disembowel them with a spoon for tee-heeing with their friends behind my back at the Metro stop. Y'know, the way I do now.

In a 1998 study, 125 undergrads of both sexes were shown 2 videos of a woman drying off after a swim. In one she was clean shaven, and in the other she had hairy armpits and legs. The unshaven woman was rated as less: moral (?!?), relaxed and fun; she was rated as more assertive, aggressive, serious and 'in better physical condition.' This was the same woman, mind you. The only difference was the presence vs. absence of hair.

A few days ago, on what I generally consider to be a feminist blog, one of the commenters (in discussing her feelings about fat acceptance vs. fatphobia) brought up the subject of choosing with whom one associates, and said, "For instance, I think women have the right not to shave if they don't want to, but I still think it's abnormal and weird and I probably wouldn't want to spend a lot of time with them." REALLY? AYFKM? (Think it out...Are You F*cking Kidding Me?) Just having looked at me, without so much as a hello, you know you don't want to chill with me based on the state of my hair follicles? Not to mention that it's NORMAL for women to have body hair--IT GROWS THERE AND WILL BE THERE UNLESS YOU ACTIVELY REMOVE IT--and so the whole "It's abnormal/weird" argument is proof positive that you've bought into the consumerist/patriarchal/western beauty complex.

The excess hair associated with PCOS is called 'hirsutism,' and it really isn't so much an excess of hair (though it can be) as it is a male-pattern hair growth--ie, on the chest, the lower stomach, the shoulders, upper lip and chin, lower back. Most people bleach it/electrolyze it/shave it. Some people, like Circus Amok performance artist Jennifer Miller (google it...you'll like it) don't. It's all part of the pulchritudinous plethora of personalities we call life. So for now, I'm going to discreetly pluck a few places...and leave the rest.