http://www.bridgetgongol.com/2013/09/the-truth-about-vaccines.html |
So it was a night like any other; the ER, flooded with kids on transfusions. Little suckers! Vampires! Malaria, the smooth murderer, had not claimed any lives yet. But I was tired. Yes, above and beyond measure for I'd been working since morning... in this same surrounding.
So I was going to inform my colleague that for the next 3 hours she shouldn't bother looking for me. That I needed to re-charge my batteries or pretend to do so at least. I found her performing a lumbar tap on a 2-month baby. I got inquisitive, obviously. The babe had seizures so she was looking for a possible infection (maybe meningitis). I stood there for a while observing her. After all, she was my senior, a resident pediatrician; I certainly couldn't demonstrate lack of interest. But since she only managed to get a drop of the csf, cerebrospinal fluid (which strangely, was semi-solid), I decided to take my leave.
Cerebrospinal fluid |
Only 2 min later in bed, did I realize that my bladder would overflow if I didn't rush to the nearest restroom. Another gymnastics at 1am, but on my way back, I waltzed by the lab where I saw my resident. Somehow, she'd managed to get that one drop of csf on the microscope, and wanted me to take a look. What I saw looked like numerous white blood cells and the reason I knew this was because she told me so. What I did know however, was that this showed that our baby had meningitis since normally, there shouldn't be this many cells in the csf. This made my night!!! Forget all the hemolysing, anemic, blood-sucking creatures in there. I had diagnosed meningitis for the first time just by looking into a microscope...and with a drop of csf. Of course, my badass resident had done all the work. I just came in to learn.
Meningitis source: http://www.soc.ucsb.edu |
Haemophilus influenzae (CDC Website PHIL Photo ID# 1946) |
Parents please, VACCINATE your children!!! It saves lives.