RALEIGH,
N.C. (AP) 7/19/12— A team of 10 doctors and their assistants crowd around an
operating table. An anesthesiologist warns Dr. Greg Lewbart that his patient's
heart rate has dropped to 35 beats per minute. But that's a good rate, the
doctor says, for a seven-pound endangered sea turtle.
Veterinarians
successfully completed experimental skull surgery on a green sea turtle
Thursday at N.C. State University in Raleigh. They say the turtle, which is too
young to easily tell its gender, needed the operation to close a three-inch
gash to the head that had exposed the protective membrane sheathing its tiny
brain.
The
turtle called Holden III washed up a month ago on Holden Beach in the southern
area of the state, apparently the victim of a boat propeller. Its front left
flipper was fractured and the turtle was possibly blinded in one injured eye.
Beachgoers
brought the turtle to the Karen Beasley Sea Turtle Hospital and Rehabilitation
Center on Topsail Island where volunteers nursed it back to health. Volunteers
then sought out medical options to help Holden III get back on its flippers.
"It's
amazing; these little greens have such determination to live," said
volunteer Peggy LeClair with the turtle hospital. "They have just strong
personalities."
Green sea
turtles, which can live more than 80 years and grow up to 5 feet and 700
pounds, regularly ply Atlantic waters along the Southeast coast. For a long
time, the endangered turtles were hunted to make handbags and turtle soup.
Later, the animal was popularized by the characters Squirt and Crush in the
Disney movie "Finding Nemo."
Dr.
Lewbart led the surgical team seeking to help the turtle's skull heal
correctly. Skull surgery on turtles is not unprecedented, Lewbart said, adding
that the university had conducted six similar surgeries during the past decade.
It was Lewbart's second skull surgery on a turtle, but the first time an
external brace had been used on a sea turtle.
The
surgery lasted 90 minutes and included an ophthalmologist, anesthesiologist,
radiologist and several lab assistants. They surrounded the table that held the
16-inch green turtle, whose brain is about as big around as a penny.
The vets
decided early on that the turtle didn't have to be put under general
anesthesia. Turtles have to make the conscious effort to breathe, and putting
them under is typically the most dangerous part of the operation. Instead,
Holden III got morphine.
Dr.
Lewbart oversaw the installation of an external brace on Holden III's skull
made out of stainless steel surgical wire, clothing hooks and glue. The plan,
he said, was to stabilize the skull fragments and allow it to heal into a
normal, functional shape.
"There
was no way we could knit everything back today, there weren't enough pieces
left for us to do that," Lewbart said. "We're going to let the turtle
fill in those gaps with mineralized tissue."
Dr.
Lewbart said Holden III was a very calm patient and was "resting
comfortably" after surgery.
The
doctors hope the knowledge gained will help with other turtles in the future.
Meanwhile they are watchful there are no complications.
Holden
III is back at the turtle hospital where the animal will undergo
rehabilitation. Lewbart plans to check back in with his patient in two weeks
and volunteers hope to have the turtle back into the wild by next spring or
fall 2013.
The
turtle hospital volunteer LeClair said she was struck by the resilience of
turtles like Holden III.
"Some
of these turtles, with what they have gone through, it's amazing to see them
heal and go back into the ocean."
No comments:
Post a Comment
You only need to enter your comment once! Comments will appear once they have been moderated. This is so as to stop the would-be comedian who has been spamming the comments here with inane and often offensive remarks. You know who you are!