Yangon General Hospital (YGH) has successfully performed a replantation surgery on a 27-year-old male patient from Hpa-an who sustained a complete palm amputation on the left hand following a knife injury on 24 May at approximately 11 am.
The patient was initially provided emergency care at Hpa-an General Hospital and was subsequently transferred to Yangon General Hospital for further treatment. After conducting necessary diagnostic procedures at the Emergency Department, a replantation surgery was carried out beginning at 10:30 pm on 24 May and concluded successfully at 5:30 am on 25 May.
The patient remained in stable health
following the operation, and the blood circulation to the reattached palm was
reported as satisfactory. He was discharged from the hospital on 11 June and
returned for a follow-up consultation on 16 June, during which his hand
condition remained good.
The surgical team comprised Dr Ye
Naing Oo and Dr Aung Hlaing Phone, both second-year orthopaedic hand surgery
doctoral trainees; Dr Khaing May Oo, a third-year doctoral trainee; Assistant
Orthopaedic Surgeon Dr Yaza Aung Saw Win; and second-year postgraduate trainee
Dr Sai Thiha. The operation was carried out under the supervision of
Anaesthetist Dr Delia Soe Win and a team of anaesthesia specialists, with
nursing support led by Sister Daw Moh Moh Aung, along with laboratory
technicians, radiographers and other supporting departments.
Yangon General Hospital has
previously conducted successful replantation surgeries: one palm replantation
in 2022, one forearm replantation in 2023, one thumb replantation in 2024 and
now this palm replantation in 2025.
For patients who require replantation
procedures, it is advised that the severed limb be washed with clean water or
normal saline (or Ringer Lactate), wrapped in sterile gauze soaked with the
same solution and placed inside a clean plastic bag or container. This should
then be sealed and placed inside an ice-filled cooler to ensure the severed
part reaches the referral hospital in a viable condition for surgery, according
to medical experts.
MNA/KZL
#TheGlobalNewLightOfMyanmar


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