September 7, 2016

9716jjwattandjeston640Earlier this summer, one of Texas Children’s patients Jeston Adams’ dreams came true – the 8-year-old got to meet his hero J.J. Watt. Since then, Jeston’s relationship with the Houston Texans football player has grown into a full-fledged friendship that has kept him going during his search for a new heart.

To Watt and Jeston’s amazement, that search ended three weeks ago when congenital heart surgeon Dr. Iki Adachi implanted a new heart into Jeston’s chest. The Louisiana native is recovering and being cared for by Dr. Jeff Dreyer, medical director of the Heart Transplant Program, and other members of the Heart Center team.

“Jeston has a very infectious personality,” Dreyer said. “He’s had a great attitude and that’s contributed to his recovery.”

After his transplant, Jeston worked with Texas Children’s Child Life team to create a video for the man he calls his big brother. Watt shared the video on social media.

“He has been a warrior through it all and handled it with such a positive attitude,” Watt wrote on Instagram. “He truly is an incredible kid with an amazing spirit. No matter what gets us down in life, how bad we feel or how negative the situation may seem, if we keep a positive attitude and fight with everything we’ve got, incredible things are possible. That’s what Jeston has taught me.”

Click here to watch CBS 11 KHOU’s update on Jeston.

9716singlevisitsurgery640Patients with simple surgery needs can now be seen in clinic by pediatric surgeons and have surgery on the same day at Texas Children’s Hospital West Campus. The hospital’s new Single-Visit Surgery program provides a convenient option for busy patient families and consists of a clinic appointment in the morning and, if necessary, an outpatient surgical procedure that same day.

“This program reduces the time and travel often necessary for families in need of pediatric surgery,” said pediatric surgeon Dr. Sohail Shah. “We are excited about being able to offer this highly accessible service to our patients and their families.”

Currently, patients who qualify for the program are children without a complicated medical history and who have the following conditions:

  • Umbilical hernia (3 years and older)
  • Inguinal hernia (12 months and older)
  • Hydrocele (12 months and older)
  • Epigastric hernia (any age)

“All of our lives are busy, and overscheduled parents are thrilled to accomplish what used to take two days in only one. The families who have to travel to Texas Children’s Hospital from far away are especially appreciative,” said Chief Surgical Officer at the West Campus Dr. Allen Milewicz. “All the members of our West Campus team came together – nurses, schedulers, finance, and administration, to – craft a process improvement that would result in a great patient experience.”

To schedule an appointment or if you have questions about the Single-Visit Surgery program, please contact the Texas Children’s Hospital West Campus Pediatric Surgery Clinic at Ext. 7-2250.

August 30, 2016

83116Wesson640By Andrew Kragie, Houston Chronicle

Pediatric surgeon Dr. David Wesson talks to the Houston Chronicle about gunshot wounds in children.

Dr. David Wesson points to a spot below his belly button. That’s where the .22-caliber bullet pierced the abdomen of the first pediatric gunshot victim he ever treated.

The boy was 1 month old. He was perched on the kitchen table. His father had been cleaning a rifle when it unexpectedly discharged. The bullet ricocheted through the infant’s body.

The surgeon’s finger traces upward across his white coat, zig-zagging like a child’s pencil following the lines of a maze: through the abdomen, into the liver and out the back.

The baby survived, Wesson said, but the Texas Children’s Hospital trauma surgeon still remembers the bullet’s path three decades later – and it still bothers him.

“When you treat somebody for cancer, you really feel that there’s not much anybody could have done to prevent that,” Wesson said. But not so with a child who’s been shot.

“You’re always thinking that, well, that could easily have been prevented,” Wesson, now a grandfather of six, said during an interview in the emergency department’s exam room.

In the last six days of July, three Houston-area children – boys 5, 7 and 11 – accidentally shot themselves in separate incidents, authorities said. Two died. Doctors and gun-safety experts say these events are doubly tragic because they are avoidable.

Houston doctor gives inside look at trauma center

The boys joined the list of 139 children accidentally shot by themselves or by other children in the first seven months of 2016, figures show. In Harris County, accidental gunshot wounds kill more children than any type of accident except vehicle crashes, according to a Chronicle analysis of medical examiner’s records from 2011 to 2014 – an average of 27 children a year.

Authorities gave the following accounts of the most recent shootings:

On July 26, Edgar Padilla, 5, shot himself in the face at his grandfather’s home in Harris County. He died two days later when life support was removed. On July 27, a 7-year-old boy shot himself in the forehead in Alvin after finding the key to his grandfather’s gun cabinet; Brazoria County police said he was expected to survive, after the bullet traversed his scalp without entering his skull. And on July 31, an 11-year-old boy shot himself in the neck while playing with his uncle’s gun in east Houston. Police said he died August 9 when he was taken off life support.

These local incidents are typical of accidental shootings by children, according to data collected by Everytown for Gun Safety, an advocacy group. Most of the more than 100 children killed accidentally in 2013 were shot in family homes with legally owned guns. At least two-thirds could have been prevented by safe storage, the group found.

Gunshots stand out as causes of injury, Wesson said, because they are more likely to require surgery than car crashes or falls. Gunshots are more likely to be life-threatening and more likely to be fatal.

And while a bullet wound is a medical emergency regardless of age, gunshots are even more devastating to children’s small bodies. “Young children have a different sort of vulnerability,” Wesson said.

Gravitate to guns

A pediatrician in southwest Houston, Dr. Christina Propst, said children’s smaller abdomens raise the chance of a bullet hitting key organs, blood vessels or the spine.

Dr. Fernando Stein, a critical-care specialist at Texas Children’s, said children’s lower body weights mean that bullets’ kinetic energy disperses across less mass.

Military researchers have experimented by firing bullets into gelatin blocks of varying sizes, Stein said. A block weighing 250 pounds – the weight of a large adult – can absorb a bullet. A 50-pound block, the weight of a young child, explodes.

Stein is president-elect of the American Academy of Pediatrics, which has guidelines for gun safety.

“Firearms should be removed from the environments where children live and play, but if they are not, they must be stored locked and unloaded,” the policy reads. “Safe storage practices can reduce the risk of death or injury.”

Research shows that children gravitate toward guns and rarely handle them safely, Stein said. “When they see a gun, they take it and they hold it in the position of firing and usually the first thing they do is pull the trigger.”

If parents or relatives keep guns in homes where children live or visit, Stein said locks and safes are crucial. He pointed to fingerprint-activated safes that cost as little as $120 and allow quick access for self-defense.

Multiple safety systems

Paul Slogan, an employee at Lone Star Gun Safes in Houston, agreed that fingerprint-activated safes are more secure. However, he said, “with kids, anything’s better than nothing.” A simple gun lock, a cable that runs through the chamber and magazine, costs less than $20. A trigger lock’s price tag is about $10.

Stein recommends using multiple safety systems, such as locking ammunition and firearms separately while also keeping on a trigger lock.

However, the doctors said, locks are not foolproof. One of the Houston-area victims found the key to his grandfather’s locked gun cabinet.

“Kids are curious, and they will watch what you’re doing,” Propst said. If they can find a key, she said, “they will find their way, unfortunately, into locked cabinets.”

A National Rifle Association spokesman, Lars Dalseide, said the organization had no comment. The NRA’s “Eddie Eagle” safety website says children should be taught not to touch guns and to tell adults when they find them.

Federal statistics show that children are 25 times more likely to die in a car crash than by accidental gunshot. The Centers for Disease Control also reports that the rate of death by accidental shooting has steadily declined since 1970. That year, 1.6 children per 100,000 died by accidental shooting; by 2014 that number was 0.4 per 100,000.

However, Everytown for Gun Safety says it has found that the CDC vastly undercounts accidental shooting deaths – so many of which could be prevented by safe storage.

Learn to ‘respect gun’

Ken Stonebraker, a gun safety instructor in Dallas, agreed that hiding a gun or keeping it out of reach is not enough. For parents who want a gun handy in case of intruders, he suggested following his example: Keep one gun nearby in a fingerprint-activated safe and lock the rest in a complex gun safe.

Stonebraker said he believes familiarity with guns can diminish the risk. When his daughters turned 8, the Army veteran said, he took them out to shoot a .45 caliber gun at milk cartons. They felt the recoil and saw the damage done, he said. “They learned to respect a gun and they learned that a gun’s not a toy.”

In classes he teaches to parents and children, he tells kids always to assume a gun is loaded and to tell an adult whenever they find a weapon.

But training can’t eliminate risk, Stein said. “There is no education that can prevent a child from doing what they do because they are children, which is hold the gun and pull the trigger.”

Sitting in the emergency department at Texas Children’s, just yards from the trauma bay where he directs the treatment of pediatric gunshot victims, Wesson remembers how many drivers refused to use seat belts when they were introduced because they considered themselves safe drivers. They knew about the recommendation; it just didn’t apply to them.

In the same way, Wesson said, “it’s hard for individual people to accept the general rule” that guns in family homes are more of a danger than a safeguard.

“People think, well, it won’t happen in my family, in my home,” he said. “But the fact is that if you look across the whole population, people are much more likely to hurt themselves or other members of their family if they have a gun in the home than they are to injure or stop some intruder.”

Lack of awareness

Wesson can’t say whether he treated any of the three Houston-area boys who recently shot themselves by accident. So instead he talks about the month-old child he treated all those years ago as a young surgeon.

To me it sort of epitomizes the whole issue,” he said in the ER, where young patients’ artwork decorates the hallways. “It wasn’t because of anything but carelessness, and maybe a lack of awareness.”

A little girl walks by, holding her mother’s hand. Before exiting the emergency department, she turns and waves to a nearby cluster of adults that includes the surgeon.

“Bye,” Wesson says quietly, raising his hand and returning her wave.

He seems energized after interacting with this small patient.

Then he thinks back to that baby and the bullet that ricocheted through his tiny abdomen.

“Why’d that have to happen?” Wesson asks. “It didn’t have to happen. It didn’t.”

August 23, 2016

82416thorasicsurgeryinside640Texas Children’s Hospital’s congenital heart surgery program recently earned a three star rating from the Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS), the highest possible distinction.

Star ratings are based on the STS Congenital Heart Surgery Database (CHSD) mortality risk model. One hundred and seventeen congenital heart surgery programs nationwide participated in the Spring 2016 STS CHSD Feedback Report. Texas Children’s is among only eight hospitals in the U.S. to earn a three star rating.

“We are honored to be recognized for our outcomes, which are among the best in the nation,” said Dr. Charles D. Fraser Jr., surgeon-in-chief and chief of congenital heart surgery. “Since 1995, our congenital heart surgery program has carefully tracked patient outcomes and continues to be committed to transparency. Information about our performance is a driver of innovation and critical to elevating the quality of care we provide to our patients every day.”

Texas Children’s Heart Center is comprised of an expert team of congenital heart surgeons, pediatric cardiologists, pediatric cardiovascular anesthesiologists and pediatric critical care physicians, among others. In 2015, Texas Children’s congenital heart surgery program’s overall risk-adjusted mortality rate was 1.6 percent, well below the STS national benchmark of 2.9 percent. Outcomes for atrial septal defect repairs, ventricular septal defect repairs, atrioventricular canal repairs, tetralogy of Fallot repairs and arterial switch operations were also below STS national benchmarks last year.

Texas Children’s is ranked No. 2 nationally in cardiology and heart surgery by U.S. News & World Report. To learn more about Texas Children’s Heart Center outcomes visit the website. For more information about STS Congenital Heart Surgery Public Reporting click here.

August 9, 2016

81016anesthesiasurgery640Members of the Departments of Anesthesia and Surgery recently filled the Main OR in West Tower for the 2016 Anesthesia and Surgery Rodeo.

The annual training session gives department members a chance to get hands-on experience with the latest anesthesia and surgical equipment brought in by various medical vendors.

Some of the equipment tested during this year’s rodeo include:

  • AccuVein
  • aScope bronchoscope
  • ConMed
  • Crash Cart
  • Ethicon
  • Just Right 3mm Sealer
  • Legasure
  • Malignant Hypothermia
  • Sonosite X-Porte
  • Karl Storz
  • Surgical Airway Cart
July 26, 2016

year in review fraser 640

During his annual Department of Surgery year in review, Surgeon-in-Chief Dr. Charles D. Fraser Jr. proclaimed that anything can be done if you work together toward a common goal.

“It isn’t enough for the muscles of a crew to work in unison,” Fraser quoted from The Boys In The Boat, a book he read and referenced several times during his talk on July 22 in the packed Texas Children’s Hospital auditorium. “Their hearts and minds must also be as one.”

Teamwork, Fraser said, is the secret to the success of the Department of Surgery, which is composed of 600 employees and nine subspecialties with support from many other teams that are dedicated to caring for and improving the health of children through patient care, education and research.

The department’s team has grown exponentially during the past few years reaching 94 surgeons and 94 advanced practice providers in 2016. Many of those clinical staff members are in leadership roles, have academic responsibilities at Baylor College of Medicine and have earned awards for their service. The department also has the support of one of the largest pediatric anesthesiology departments in the county and dedicated perioperative services.

Two of the department’s newest leaders – Chief of Neurosurgery Dr. Howard Weiner and Chief of Otolaryngology Dr. Ellis Arjmand – took the podium during Fraser’s presentation to talk about their vision for the divisions and accomplishments to date.

Weiner, who started at Texas Children’s Hospital in May, told the audience he joined the team for various reasons including the fact that his core values and leadership style – which encompasses outstanding surgical care, attentive service, quality and integrity, innovation and investigation – mirrors that of the Department of Surgery’s.

“When I came to visit here, I was blown away by the vision to be the national and international destination for the most world class innovative, high-quality, attentive neurologic care for children,” Weiner said. “In addition, the leadership here demonstrates an unselfish service to the team and believes group accomplishments and success are primary.”

Weiner, whose clinic interests include medically refractory epilepsy and tuberous sclerosis complex, said he hopes to use his own success to empower and support an outstanding team.

When Arjmand took the stage, he outlined the tremendous growth of his team and their proven ability to widen the scope of otolaryngological services to the greater Houston area. With more than 20 otolaryngologists, seven advanced practice providers and three fellows, members of the otolaryngology team have increased the number of outpatient visits 74 percent since 2013 to more than 35,000.

“We have made maximum use of the Texas Children’s community to reach people throughout the greater Houston area,” Arjmand said, adding that Texas Children’s has tremendous leadership and a pool of talent that is seizing opportunities each day to better serve our current and future patients.

Fraser agreed and said he couldn’t possibly list all of the department’s accomplishments but highlighted the following:

  • Outpatient visits increased 11 percent compared with last year totaling 149,937.
  • Surgical cases increased 7 percent during the same time frame to 30,696.
  • Texas Children’s Transplant Services was named the most active pediatric program in the country in 2015.
  • U.S. News & World Report rankings were strong with cardiology and heart surgery as well as neurology and neurosurgery coming in at No. 2, urology at No. 5, gastroenterology and GI surgery at No. 6 and orthopedics at No. 21.
  • The hospital was verified as a Level I Children’s Surgery Center by the American College of Surgeons.
  • Department members gave almost 300 presentations, published almost 250 papers, wrote 18 book chapters and edited and/or wrote eight books.

“We have a lot going on,” Fraser said. “You are doing so much every single day, and for that I thank you.”

The future, Fraser predicted, will be more of the same with several promising research programs in the works, surgical seed grants awarded, expanded service areas, innovation opportunities and more.

“We have a lot to look forward to,” he said. “The future of the Department of Surgery at Texas Children’s is very bright.”

To watch the 2016 year-in-review presentation, click here (link will redirect to Connect).

July 19, 2016

93015JohnDormans175Chief of Orthopedics John Dormans, MD, received an honorary professorship in Orthopaedic Surgery from the School of Medicine at the University of Basrah in Basra, Iraq. He was presented with the honor at the university’s spring graduation ceremony by Thamer Hamdan, MD, chancellor of the University of Basrah. Dormans received this honor for his humanitarian work with the international pediatric orthopedic community.