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Patient-Focused Medicine

Healing the New-Fashioned Way

Pediatrician Dr. Adeola Ayodeji attending to one of Greater Hudson Valley Family Health Center’s youngest patients during a well-child visit.

Pediatrician Dr. Adeola Ayodeji attending to one of Greater Hudson Valley Family Health Center’s youngest patients during a well-child visit.

Changes in medical technology occur so rapidly that healing professionals are compelled to update their knowledge and training just to stay current. Meanwhile, the rest of us amble on with a pedestrian vocabulary of medical procedures until something happens, like an illness or a physical breakdown. It might suddenly seem that amazing new diagnostic instruments are available, that outpatient services have been drastically expanded, and our basic understanding of medical terms is lagging. A brief survey of what’s new is in order.

Digital Imaging
Medical practitioners and facilities of the Hudson Valley region offer some of the best in medical technological advancements. Many area dentists are now using Diagnodent lasers and intraoral cameras to augment digital X-ray appliances, for example. Digital imaging not only minimizes radiation exposure due to the fewer number of images taken, but also offers the advantage of easily stored and retrieved patient images for reference and transfer purposes. Most medical facilities have converted to digital imaging as a regular practice in lieu of film radiographs. Certainly digital mammography is faster, safer, and more precise in terms of deciphering exactly what is seen on a patient’s image. When a radiologist can zoom in and enhance a picture—and do it almost instantly—a patient’s results can be determined immediately and with greater accuracy.

In Kingston, the consolidation of the Fern Feldman Anolick Breast Center at Benedictine Hospital and The Greenspan Center for Women’s Health at Kingston Hospital is culminating in a new, state-of-the-art Center for Breast Health, to be located in the Thomas A. Dee Cancer Center on the Benedictine Hospital campus. Lead mammographer Gail Muench says that when the new center opens in the fall, the comprehensive program will include not only mammography and ulstrasound, but also breast MRI and breast specific gamma imaging (BSGI). Ultrasonography is an imaging technique using high-frequency sound waves that are sent through body tissue to produce an image—a sonogram—on a viewing screen. BSGI, a technology not currently offered in the region, involves injecting a nuclear contrast medicine into tissue, and is particularly useful in detecting cancers smaller than one centimeter.

Mammography remains the first method of detection for breast cancers but doesn’t always relay complete and clear diagnostic information. Ultrasonography, BSGI, and breast MRI, which shoots cross-sectional pictures behind the breast and deep into the chest wall, are all used for more complete auxiliary diagnoses. Muench and her associates are very pleased about soon having BSGI in their array of options. “Patients won’t have to wait the typical six-months for doctors to watch questionable lesions when deciding to biopsy or not,” says Muench. “There will be a learning curve for us, but it’s very exciting. That six-month wait was always a problem for us, and it’s very stressful for the patient.”

Minimally Invasive Techniques
Minimally invasive techniques in surgery requiring only very small incisions have begun to reach science fiction levels of wonder. Dr. Elisa Burns of Mount Kisco Medical Group reports how robotically assisted, laparoscopic surgery has altered gynecological treatments, offering patients less pain, a lower risk of infection, minimal scarring, decreased blood loss, and faster recovery times. “Patients who have undergone minimally invasive hysterectomies are now going home the day of or the day after surgery, and generally go back to work within one to two weeks,” Dr. Burns says. “We are now also performing minimally invasive surgery for endometrial cancers. At Northern Westchester Hospital, we use their da Vinci robot, a sophisticated and precise tool.” It has a 3-D, high-resolution video feature that provides better visualization of the robotic surgical process. Burns says that some cancer patients can undergo surgery one day and be released the next.

Endovascular surgery is another minimally invasive technique performed by radiologists, neurologists, neurosurgeons, cardiologists, and vascular surgeons, accessing regions of the body via major blood vessels. Interventional radiology can be used to diagnose pathology by injecting a radio-opaque dye that can be seen on live X-ray or fluoroscopy, and to treat these with image-guided instruments like needles and catheters. Both are offered at MD Imaging/Valley Endovascular in Poughkeepsie, where trauma is minimized for patients of aortic aneurysms, atherosclerosis, vascular injury, and other coronary diseases, reducing both infection rates and recovery time, as well as shortening hospital stays. Dr. Gary Grossman, medical director at MD Imaging, describes how a catheter device inserted into a blood vessel that supplies an ailing or damaged organ can introduce chemotherapy or blood-blocking material directly. “For example, instead of undergoing major surgery for removal of a fibroid tumor, a patient has the option where we can actually put a catheter in the uterine artery and inject some material that will cause the fibroid to shrink, avoiding a traditional six-week recovery from hysterectomy. That can be done on an outpatient basis as well.”

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