Sunday, March 15, 2009

These were the first patients - and unfortunately for 81 year old Matches, he was the first. I will show his eye on an adjacent blog soon. On this second blog, I will show awsome close up photos of the proceedures on these patients.

These are just one day's post ops.


This young girl was in the adjacent hospital. She had an epileptic sesiure and fell face first into a fire. She would not open her eyes because of the pain. Her father never left her side and in this photo, was preparing to take her for a walk. Since our return, we have herd that she is doing well.

Mercy has Steven Johnson Syndrom. This photo shows Mercy, minutes after surgery, looking into her husband's eyes for the first time in over 4 months. I will tell more of this emotional story in a future posting.


His right eye has been remove previously, and there was nothing we could do for his left eye. The likely cause - HIV.

Her eye lashes are turned under and are damaging her cornea as she blinks. We were able to correct the lashes by removing a portion of her lid and re-positioning her lashes. The cause of her trachoma is clamidia.


This lady had a squemous cell carsanoma covering her entire pupil and iris. After removing the surface of the cancer, we found that it was growing in to the eye. This eye will have to be removed on a future visit. The likely cause for such a extreme case - HIV.


This lady had a squemous cell carsanoma on her right eye that we were able to remove and patch with an amnionic stem cell graph. The likely cause - HIV.



4 year old Sazja, had injured his eye with a stick or branch and then it got infected. We covered the eye with a amnionic graph to keep it from having to be removed. His vision will be permanently limited - that is if he has any left.


Outside the clinic, family members waited, sometimes for days.

I helped made sure patients had the necessary drops and the YAG Laser (Cataract Patients) was adjusted for the doctor. We tried to keep him moving, so that we could help as many as possible.
I set up and then, while Dr. Colquhoun fired the SLT Laser (Glaucoma Patients) , I adjusted the power.




After the second hospital surgery on 4 yr old Sazja, Dr. Colquhoun presented some instruments to the hospital that a friend in Battle Creek had donated. The hospital and eye clinic exist only because of donated time and materials.

I will have something to say in later postings regarding each of these individuals. They were an awsome, helpful, and fun group. It is pretty cool to travel to the other side of the planet and meet people no different than ourselves.




This is the, not so safe, path across from Victoria Falls.

"The Light" falls on the enterance to the hospital and eye clinic.
A worshiper, deep in prayer, during a 3 hour church service.




Looking out an open window at the foot of a loved one's hospital bed.