Monday 20 June 2016

Dr. Byron Brown - Assisting in Contraceptive Management

Dr Byron A Brown is an Obstetrician and Gynecologist who has worked at his own private practice for ten years in Laurens, South Carolina before moving on to Southland Hospital, where he works with patients to resolve their gynecological issues and assist in childbirth issues. He also teaches young doctors completing their residences how to diagnose gynecological conditions and work well with expectant mothers. Dr. Brown considers it part of his job to help other hospital professionals with effective contraceptive management whenever possible as an expert OBGYN physician.

Contraceptive management is a discipline that nurses and other healthcare professionals can specialize in within hospital settings. Dr. Byron Brown sometimes works with contraception management nurses at Southland Hospital to help with patients concerned about their contraception options and methods. Registered nurses have to complete certification in contraception management to independently provide hormonal contraception to eligible clients. Dr. Byron Brown trusts these professionals implicitly and offers his assistance to the nurses in his hospital whenever possible. Nurses who are certified in contraception management use Decision Support Tools, or documents used to help with the assessment, diagnosis. These DSTs are often used in conjunction with clinical judgment and all available evidence.

Dr Byron A Brown believes that patients benefit the most from hospital care if all medical professionals are working together to help them. Dr. Brown works with many professionals at Southland Hospital to help build treatment plans for patients using as many sources of expert opinion and fact as he can.

Monday 13 June 2016

Dr. Byron Brown - Three Endometrial Ablation Techniques

Dr. Byron Brown has been an Obstetrician and Gynecologist for years in South Carolina. He ran a private OBGYN practice in Laurens, South Carolina for ten years before he moved on to work for Southland Hospital starting in 2012. Dr. Brown continues to work with patients, helping them diagnose all kinds of gynecological conditions while teaching other doctors and assisting in childbirth and pregnancies for many expecting mothers. One of operations he is quite familiar with is endometrial ablation, which relieves heavy menstruation by destroying a thin layer of the uterus to stop the menstrual flow or lighten it. Here are three ways this operation is done:
  • Radiofrequency. OBGYNs like Dr. Byron Brown sometimes insert a probe into the uterus through the cervix. The tip of probe expands into a mesh device that transmits radiofrequency energy into the lining. This energy and heat destroys the endometrial tissue.
  • Freezing. Using ultrasound to guide the thin probe, doctors like Dr. Byron Brown freeze the uterine lining with the tip of the probe.
  • Heated balloon. Doctors place a balloon in the uterus using a hysteroscope. Heated fluid fills the balloon until it is pressed against the uterine lining. The heat kills the uterine lining.
Dr. Byron Brown has helped women with this procedure both in his career in private practice and in his career as a hospital physician. He has many patients who have gotten their conditions taken care of with little or no complications during his medical career.

Tuesday 7 June 2016

Dr. Byron Brown - Three Benefits of a Laparoscopic Hysterectomy

Dr. Byron Brown has long been an advocate for laparoscopic surgery because it is minimally invasive and leaves patients with shorter recovery times, less scar tissue, and less risk of infection or other complications. One common operation that Dr. Brown has helped with as a surgical assistant and as a general surgeon during the early stages of his residency is the hysterectomy. Today, laparoscopic hysterectomies are being offered at many hospitals to benefit patients requiring this operation. Here are three benefits of laparoscopic hysterectomies as opposed to traditional methods:
  • The operation can be performed on an outpatient basis. Since there is no need for incisions made in the abdomen or vagina, patients can be in and out of an operating room in an hour for laparoscopic hysterectomies. Dr. Byron Brown tells patients that a small incision is made at the navel and thin cameras are inserted into the incision, giving surgeons a clear view of their operations.
  • Minimal risk of complications. Since laparoscopic hysterectomies are performed with very little open exposure of a patient’s internal organs, the risk of infection or other complications is greatly reduced.
  • Minimal scarring and short recovery times. Again, as Dr. Byron Brown explains, the use of small incisions and thin instruments instead of standard surgical equipment makes for short recovery times and minimal scarring. Many patients can return to work in a week or ten days.
Dr Byron A Brown has helped many patients get their hysterectomies taken care of in a short, easy procedure that features short recovery times and minimal side effects or risks of complication.

Wednesday 1 June 2016

Dr. Byron Brown - Managing High-Risk Pregnancies

Dr. Byron Brown is an OBGYN specialist working for Southland Hospital. He assists other doctors in the pregnancy ward and trains new residents and other professionals in Obstetrics and Gynecology. One of his many duties as an OBGYN is managing high-risk pregnancies, in which having a baby can cause the mother serious health side effects and/or cause danger to the baby itself. Dr. Brown used to run his own OBGYN private practice for ten years, so he has seen many complications in expectant mothers over the years. He knows how to handle both common and uncommon risk factors in high-risk pregnancies and manage them well all the way to term.

Dr. Byron Brown has helped mothers of many varying ages have their babies safely. Age is a large risk factor for pregnancies. Expectant mothers under the age of 17 and over the age of 35 are faced with a much larger risk of complications than others. Extensive research shows that the risk of miscarriage and genetic defects increase after a mother turns 40. Dr. Byron Brown has also dealt with risk factors involving preexisting conditions in mothers. Things like high blood pressure, lungs, kidney, and heart problems, and diabetes can negatively affect pregnancies for both mothers and babies.

Dr. Byron A Brown has helped many mothers with high risk factors deliver their babies without complications throughout his career as an OBGYN specialist. He teaches many new doctors how to help their expectant patients get through their high-risk pregnancies without incident.