Earlier this month, MedCAD President and CEO Nancy Hairston launched into a 5-day medical mission journey with theĀ Christian Medical Affiliation of Ukraine.
MedCAD had donated custom-made 3D implants and Hairston was eager to see the impact the gadgets have been having. She accompanied 4 US medical doctors as they labored with native surgeons to reconstruct extreme facial trauma with 100% {custom} implants created and donated by MedCAD.
The U.S. workforce on this āImaginative and prescient for Ukraineā mission consisted of Dallas surgeon Dr. Jorge Corona, a world-class oculoplastic surgeon; Dr. Stuart Seiff, Ā a San Franciso based mostly surgeon, one of many worldās main orbital reconstruction consultants; Dr. Patrick Carpenter, a Bay Space microsurgeon specializing in advanced flap reconstructions and Dr. John Frodel, a maxillofacial surgeon with 20 years of expertise in fight accidents.
Under is Nancyās first-hand account.
Day 1Ā
We arrived in Kyiv at the moment and went straight to the hospital to satisfy the hospital workforce, surgeons, and sufferers. We met sufferers who obtained our implants in earlier mission journeys, and one man particularly who was six months into his restoration. His left cheek bone and eye orbit have been broken, however he seems good, and he appears to be getting via it. He speaks exceptionally good English.
Lots of the sufferers communicate English, and communication isn’t a barrier. Whether or not via dialog or easy human gestures like hugs, their appreciation and resilience are unmistakable.

Even in struggle, up to now, Kyiv seems like a traditional metropolis. Individuals are strolling across the metropolis, the cafes are hopping with clients, and I’ve not seen plenty of devastation. However itās not even 10 p.m. but, and a lot of the bombings right here occur early within the morning, nicely earlier than daybreakā¦
We’re in a regional hospital, and it’s not even a serious one, however medical doctors Yurii Chepurnyl and Oleksandr Vasyliev Ā are creating an particularly essential cranio-maxillofacial program right here. They’re doing so many circumstances per week, andĀ theyāre so gifted and good, it is simply mind-blowing, ā¦
Thereās an orbital flooring recipient right here who speaks good English, so we had fairly a chat. He was once the Ukraine supervisor for an Italian shoe model earlier than he received drafted. He’s blind in a single eye and retired from the battle however grateful to be alive. I requested whatās subsequent and heās not quitting the battle; he plans to do logistics for the navy.
Itās 1 am and no air alert but, so I hope to go to mattress and never should go to the shelter within the basement of the constructing. Iām exhausted.Ā
Day 2
Good night from Kyiv! The final two days of surgical procedures and assembly earlier MedCAD implant recipients have been profitable. There are many good emotions and gratitude from these courageous individuals!
These struggle harm circumstances are very completely different from what we work with every day. The blasts created issues with delicate tissues and at the moment was a very advanced case, a maxillary fibula flap reconstruction and an orbital flooring situation.Ā Patrick and Yurii carried out an 8-hour surgical procedure that was extraordinarily advanced, I receivedāt lie, however in the long run, they have been pleased with the end result.Within the US, microvascular surgical procedure for fibula connection is completed with microscopes, however surgeons haven’t got them right here. And so Patrick, a rock star younger surgeon from San Francisco, carried out the surgical procedure with little loupes on his glasses. It was robust process, however Patrickās already dedicated to coming again on the following mission, and heās bringing surgical microscopes for the hospital.
Weāre within the OR now, engaged on the orbital flooring and the implant just about slid in. The affected person has a purposeful eye and his imaginative and prescient can be saved. Kudos to MedCADās Dennis and the recon workforce on the design of those implants.
Going to the hospital, seeing these sufferers. Itās simply⦠I imply the type of accidents, it is heartbreaking. However then again, everyone seems to be upbeat. The entire workforce is like, OK, letās roll up our sleeves and let’s assist these individuals. That is what we’re right here for, you already know?
Tomorrow is one other VERY massive day with the mandible recon and cranial implant. Please ship us some good vibes!
Day 3
As you stroll via the hospital you see virtually everyone is lacking an eye fixed. Or each eyes. The Russians ship drones with grenades on them, and individuals are getting these blast accidents that blind them. Typically the explosion isnāt that near them, however the stress of the blast is ruining their eyes.
Then there’s shrapnel. I used to be within the room when one of many surgeons pulled a overseas object from deep in a affected personās face; it was a chunk of a silicon chip from a drone. It was so surreal.

I imply, no one’s introduced their ego right here. It has been unbelievable to look at these surgeons, see them studying one another’s minds. Theyāll inform one another, āOK, John are you able to leap in and assist out with the lack of tissue across the cheek space,ā or āJorge, scrub in and try this nerve state of affairs.ā It is so cool to look at.
These Ukrainian medical doctors are so extremely gifted. They’re doing a lot trauma, and we’re all studying from them. The collaboration is like choreography. The U.S. and the Ukrainian docs have finished 5 missions collectively and solely about as usually as each six months, but it surelyās like a well-rehearsed ballet.
Itās extremely gratifying to be part of this wonderful group of individuals right here and caring sufficient to make use of their very own time. They’re doing ten surgical procedures proper now and so they’ll be within the OR until 1 a.m. this morning once more. Theyāre altering these individuals’s lives, giving them hope, giving them a little bit little bit of a greater future. Itās the hope that fuels this workforce.
The surgeons maintain saying that we’re like a household, and that features everyone at MedCAD, working from afar. We’re all working for one thing a lot larger than all of us.
Day 4
Day 4 from Kyivāour final within the capitalāand we’re driving out tonight. No bombings whereas we have been right here, for which I’m grateful. Orbital flooring and Maxilla implants went nicely at the moment, and so they match completely.
Weāve finished three intense circumstances within the final three days, fibula reconstructions of the mandible and the maxilla. It isn’t simply the bony anatomy that’s affected by these accidents; itās a number of advanced techniques. The blasts have an effect on the vessels, and it takes great ability for Patrick, the microvascular surgeon, to attach.Ā The approaches have simply been a little bit bit completely different than they’d be ordinarily. In a single case yesterday, there was a lot scar tissue that they needed to suppose on the fly and open up the face in an unconventional means. Nothing is easy.

As an organization, MedCAD is extremely expert at most cancers reconstruction, however we do not do a ton of trauma so Iām studying quite a bit.
A affected person we did yesterday had a crushed cheekbone. We had used his imaging to see the place the fragments of the bones have been after we made his implant, however after we received within the OR, we did not even have to make use of the chopping guides as a result of every little thing was already damaged.Ā
Day 5
We’re in Lviv proper now. Itās a phenomenal outdated European city, like a film set. The bombings, artillery and drones have been taking place in Kyiv, however not a lot right here. However nonetheless, we simply went to a restaurant that had basements that they use as a bomb shelter. Individuals aren’t residing like they’re in concern, however they’re clearly residing with every day stress.
As we speak weāre at a Youngsters’s Hospital as a result of Jorge and Stuart are doing ocular plastic circumstances tonight. Many are congenital defectsā they’re advanced circumstances for ocular plastics āand people sorts of defects donāt cease throughout wars.One of many youngsters we noticed was damage in a bomb blast. He misplaced his legs and a few fingers and suffered facial injury. He is simply 16. I believe weāll most likely do an implant for his facial harm.Ā However you sit right here and go, what is that this all for? Why?
I imply, it is mindless. It is completely mindless.
An entire technology.
The message I wish to ship again is that these individuals are struggling, and any one among us can contribute in some small means. It will possibly make extra of a distinction than you would ever think about. And that’s what we get the chance to do. I hope I get that message throughout to all of you and the employeesĀ in MedCAD. You know the way proud I’m of my workforce that we’re ready to do that.Ā That is what we do day-after-day in the USA, however you get to essentially really feel it in a spot like this. These individuals aren’t residing on the moon like our media tells us. We’re all a part of a world village, and in the case of how we may help, Ukraine is simply as shut as Denver or Pittsburgh or Jacksonville or for wherever else we do surgical planning.We’re making a distinction. āWeā which means individuals in the USA, and these surgeons, and āweā which means MedCAD. I simply need everybody on the firmāfrom the individual segmenting to the case administration to the individual making the implant, to the individual transport itāto know that each single one among us is making a distinction.
