A British surgeon amputated a teenage patient's left arm using instructions that a colleague sent via text messages, according to the U.K. Daily Mail. The teen initially received an amputation just below his shoulder after a hippopotamus bit him. The boy, identified only as J, had suffered from a severe infection after the partial amputation and had just a few days to live, the doctor told the newspaper.
Thomas called the procedure "easy" and wished Nott luck, but Nott told the Daily Mail that he believed the teen stood an 80% chance of dying.
Nott said that the potential for complications was "enormous." With a pint of blood, a scalpel, forceps, and minimal anesthetic, Nott removed the entire shoulder, including the scapula. Nott performed the surgery in October while working for the French group Doctors Without Borders. He relayed the story during an interview with the Daily Mail this week. The experience was one of many horrors Nott recalled during his time in Congo, which is at war.
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