<p>Bengaluru: A museum showcasing actual cases of patients who had to face complications during surgery, how doctors salvaged it and lessons learnt from the procedure was set up during the Interventional Pulmonology Conference in the city on Sunday. </p>.<p>The museum was inaugurated by Dr Pyng Lee, Director of Interventional Pulmonology, Division of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, National University Hospital, Singapore; and Dr David Fielding, Professor at Royal Brisbane Clinical Unit, Australia. </p>.Autoimmune patients suffer quietly as govt recognition eludes.<p>The exhibit also displayed the post-operation complications. The damaged equipment that led to complications during surgeries were also laid down for participants to understand better. </p>.<p>Posters explaining complications that could arise from each part of the lung were stuck with QR codes containing videos of the same complication for viewers to understand the situation better. </p>.<p>Video bytes from experts of the field were also available at the museum, the participants could listen to them for expert opinions and their own experiences in the field. </p>.<p>Each pulmonologist was encouraged to write a note elaborating their experience with complications and stick on the wall as a way to embrace it. </p>.<p>Speaking about the museum, Dr Ravindra Mehta, Founder and Director, Vaayu Chest and Sleep Specialists, and Senior Consultant and Head Pulmonology, Interventional Pulmonology and Sleep Medicine, Apollo Hospitals, and organiser of the event, said: “It took the team more than two and a half months to come up with ideas and put them all together. We had to go through each complicated case that we have had in the last 20 years to fetch the videos, edit and make them presentable.” </p>
<p>Bengaluru: A museum showcasing actual cases of patients who had to face complications during surgery, how doctors salvaged it and lessons learnt from the procedure was set up during the Interventional Pulmonology Conference in the city on Sunday. </p>.<p>The museum was inaugurated by Dr Pyng Lee, Director of Interventional Pulmonology, Division of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, National University Hospital, Singapore; and Dr David Fielding, Professor at Royal Brisbane Clinical Unit, Australia. </p>.Autoimmune patients suffer quietly as govt recognition eludes.<p>The exhibit also displayed the post-operation complications. The damaged equipment that led to complications during surgeries were also laid down for participants to understand better. </p>.<p>Posters explaining complications that could arise from each part of the lung were stuck with QR codes containing videos of the same complication for viewers to understand the situation better. </p>.<p>Video bytes from experts of the field were also available at the museum, the participants could listen to them for expert opinions and their own experiences in the field. </p>.<p>Each pulmonologist was encouraged to write a note elaborating their experience with complications and stick on the wall as a way to embrace it. </p>.<p>Speaking about the museum, Dr Ravindra Mehta, Founder and Director, Vaayu Chest and Sleep Specialists, and Senior Consultant and Head Pulmonology, Interventional Pulmonology and Sleep Medicine, Apollo Hospitals, and organiser of the event, said: “It took the team more than two and a half months to come up with ideas and put them all together. We had to go through each complicated case that we have had in the last 20 years to fetch the videos, edit and make them presentable.” </p>